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Policy

Ethereum Foundation Reset Deepens ETH Sentiment And Direction Debate

Ethereum Foundation’s reorganization is now moving beyond the headline staff cuts and into a broader debate over how EF will fund, coordinate and defend Ethereum’s next stage. EF has reorgani

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 24, 2026
6 min read
NEWS
Ethereum Foundation Reset Deepens ETH Sentiment And Direction Debate
CryptoCompass editorial visual for policy coverage.

Ethereum Foundation’s reorganization is now moving beyond the headline staff cuts and into a broader debate over how EF will fund, coordinate and defend Ethereum’s next stage.

EF has reorganized around five work clusters: protocol layer, access layer, user layer, community layer and institutional layer. Operations and management support sit beside those groups, giving the Foundation a more formal structure for protocol work, user infrastructure, public communication, institutional engagement and internal execution.

The staff reduction is part of that restructuring, but the deeper market question is how EF’s narrower design changes Ethereum’s roadmap. The protocol layer is focused on scaling and hardening Ethereum without compromising censorship resistance, open source development, privacy or security. Its work includes fork safety, lower protocol complexity, reduced trusted dependencies, MEV resistance, post-quantum security, zkEVM research and L1 privacy.

The access layer is aimed at keeping Ethereum usable without forcing users through intermediaries. That includes the ability to read chain data, transact, prove, delegate and exit through paths that remain verifiable and recoverable. EF also places more attention on agents acting for users, with bounded authority, revocation and self-custody of intents built into the design direction.

Treasury Discipline Moves Into The Market Debate

EF’s updated treasury management policy gives the reorganization a financial frame. The policy sets a 15% annual operating-expense target relative to treasury size, keeps a 2.5-year operating buffer and aims to reduce annual spending toward a 5% long-term baseline over time.

That spending framework now sits beside ETH market pressure. Investors and developers are watching how EF balances operating costs, grants, ETH sales, staking income and core development funding while the organization becomes smaller and more focused.

The Foundation’s treasury is no longer managed only through asset sales. EF began staking about 70,000 ETH, with rewards directed back to the treasury. The staking setup uses open-source validator tooling, minority clients, hosted infrastructure and self-managed hardware across several jurisdictions.

Staking gives EF ETH-denominated yield, but it also makes the Foundation participate directly in the same operational layer it helps steward. Validator performance, liquidity timing, treasury runway and spending discipline now sit closer together in the market’s reading of EF’s financial position.

Funding pressure has already become a public concern. Warnings that Ethereum could face a core development funding squeeze within three to nine months pushed the debate beyond internal EF management and into the wider question of who pays for client work, research, security and public goods as the ecosystem grows.

ETH Sentiment Weakens During The Reset

Positive ETH social sentiment has declined while price action remains weak and Foundation direction dominates discussion. ETH recently traded near $1,628, with the intraday range holding between about $1,616 and $1,680.

The sentiment drop reflects a market that is still invested in Ethereum’s long-term role but less confident about near-term execution. Ethereum remains central to DeFi, stablecoins, tokenized assets, staking, L2 settlement and smart contracts, yet ETH holders have been weighing that infrastructure position against weaker price performance and a more cautious Foundation budget.

The current debate is not only about whether EF is smaller. It is about whether the new EF is clearer. The updated mandate places censorship resistance, open-source infrastructure, privacy, security, MEV resistance and self-sovereign access at the center of the Foundation’s role. The earlier Ethereum Foundation mandate reset already pushed EF away from broad ecosystem management and toward Ethereum’s base guarantees.

That direction can sharpen priorities, but it also leaves less room for EF to act as the default answer to every ecosystem funding gap. ETH sentiment is now tied to how quickly the Foundation proves that a narrower mandate can still support protocol delivery, public-goods funding and credible institutional adoption.

Institutional Layer Adds A New Adoption Track

The new institutional layer gives EF a dedicated route for banks, enterprises, governments, universities and nonprofits using Ethereum. The Foundation’s stated goal is not to turn Ethereum into a permissioned financial backend. Its institutional work is meant to support integrations that preserve exit rights, privacy, data portability, fair execution and verifiable systems.

That creates a cleaner lane for Ethereum’s real-world adoption story. Tokenized assets, regulated stablecoins, enterprise settlement and public-sector systems are already moving toward public blockchains, but institutions still need standards, reference architectures, privacy assumptions and policy guidance before using Ethereum at scale.

The institutional layer now owns that work inside EF. It can help Ethereum compete for serious financial and public-sector adoption without giving up the network’s core properties. The same layer will also track policy and regulatory developments that could affect censorship resistance, privacy and open access.

The challenge is execution speed. Institutional adoption usually moves through compliance reviews, procurement, legal structure, custody design and operational risk management. EF’s new structure gives that work a formal home, but market confidence will depend on visible reference architectures, standards and successful integrations rather than internal reorganization alone.

Development Spreads Beyond EF

Ethereum research and development is also spreading outside the Foundation. Former EF researchers recently launched Ethlabs with BitMine and Joe Lubin backing, adding an independent nonprofit research lab focused on settlement, interoperability, institutional use cases and ETH-aligned infrastructure.

That external buildout can strengthen Ethereum if new labs, client teams and public-goods funders add capacity instead of competing for the same limited resources. It can also make coordination harder when protocol priorities, grants, research agendas and implementation timelines sit across more independent groups.

A more distributed development map fits Ethereum’s values, but the transition is not frictionless. EF still carries symbolic weight, treasury influence and coordination power. Independent labs can reduce dependency on the Foundation, while developers and investors still look to EF for roadmap clarity, funding direction and technical leadership during uncertain periods.

Ethereum’s reorganization now leaves the market with concrete markers to watch: domain-level details from EF’s five clusters, treasury spending against the 15% target, staking income from the 70,000 ETH allocation, grant flow to core teams, and institutional-layer output around standards and reference architectures. ETH sentiment remains pressured while those markers develop, with the Foundation’s next public updates expected to show how the leaner structure funds protocol work and turns its new mandate into shipped infrastructure.

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