Cryptocurrency

Ethereum validators earn a record $46M as staking rewards rate surges

Validators earned $46 million in the first week of May due to an increase in the staking rewards rate, which is a metric for validators’ annualized yield. According to data, validators earned 24,997 Ether (ETH) in the week, representing a 40% increase over the previous week’s income of $33 million, when 18,339 ETH were distributed as rewards.

The recent trend of a new memecoin called Pepe trading is the reason behind the gratitude of validators. In the past week, the average fees on the Ethereum network have exceeded 100 gwei, marking the highest level since May 2022. As gas fees increase, end users are paying over $30 per swap. The surge in gas fees has resulted in higher fee income for validators from processing transactions, in addition to their regular validator rewards.

Beaconcha.in states that the present staking rate signifies the anticipated annualized return for validators. In order to engage in the network’s consensus procedure, validators on Ethereum are mandated to stake a minimum of 32 ETH, valued at roughly $58,000.

There are two types of rewards identified by ETH Store, a company that measures reward rates: consensus rewards for proposing and attesting blocks and transaction fees for processing transactions on the Ethereum network.

Related: Worth it? Trader spends $120K on gas buying $155K worth of a memecoin

Since Ethereum’s network moved to a proof-of-stake (PoS) consensus mechanism with The Merge last year, and following the recent Shapella upgrade that enabled validator withdrawals for the first time, ETH staking has gained significant importance among institutions. 

Magazine: Joe Lubin: The truth about ETH founders split and ‘Crypto Google’

Articles You May Like

Germany accuses Azerbaijan of backing oil and gas hijack of COP29
She Took a Pill to End Her Pregnancy, Then Realized It Was a ‘Major Mistake.’ Here’s How She Saved Her Baby’s Life
Top Wall Street analysts are upbeat on these stocks for the long haul
Russian sanctions busting linked to British Overseas Territories
Experts concerned about new administration’s tax policy