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Ethereum serves as neutral blockchain standard

Global technology and finance companies are building private blockchain networks to power their own ecosystems, but a lack of shared standards is steering attention toward Ethereum’s open and permissionless model. Data from Token Terminal for the first quarter of 2026 shows Ethereum accounts for 79% of active DeFi loans, 62% of stablecoins, and 73% of tokenized funds across the five largest blockchains.

Companies including Stripe, JPMorgan, and Circle are developing separate blockchain systems that largely operate in isolation. Analysts say this fragmentation resembles the early internet, when competing private networks eventually gave way to open infrastructure.

Credible neutrality underpins adoption

Ethereum’s design is rooted in “credible neutrality,” a concept introduced by co-founder Vitalik Buterin. The approach emphasizes transparent, rule-based governance that prevents any single entity from exerting control, allowing equal participation across the network. This structure has helped position Ethereum as an independent settlement layer.

Earlier efforts by banking consortia to replicate blockchain efficiencies within closed systems have largely faltered. Projects such as We.trade and Marco Polo shut down between 2022 and 2023 after failing to sustain adoption.

The shift toward open collaboration mirrors patterns seen in software development. The “bazaar” model, popularized by engineer Eric Raymond, showed how decentralized and collaborative systems like Linux can outperform centrally managed alternatives over time.

Developer growth fuels ecosystem expansion

Ethereum’s trajectory reflects this dynamic. Electric Capital data shows more than one million contributors have worked on the ecosystem, with about 232,000 active over the past year. This makes it the largest developer base in the blockchain sector.

Major platforms continue to build on Ethereum. Robinhood selected it as the foundation for its Layer 2 infrastructure, citing decentralized security. Venice AI, which serves over three million users, has also built a privacy-focused network on Ethereum. Financial institutions including BlackRock and JPMorgan have launched tokenized money market funds, BUIDL and MONY, on the network.

Applications such as Uniswap and Aave operate without permission, enabling broader ecosystems of liquidity and risk management tools. Ethereum’s transition to proof-of-stake in 2022 further distributed control, with decentralized validation and multiple independent software clients reinforcing its operational independence.

Market performance lags despite record activity

Despite strong network growth, Ethereum’s market performance has weakened. In the first half of 2026, monthly active users rose to 13.2 million and transactions reached 200.4 million, yet the asset’s fully diluted market cap fell by more than 30%.

This divergence stems from a strategic push to reduce costs and boost adoption. Protocol upgrades in January cut mainnet fees by nearly 48% quarter over quarter, with simple transactions now costing just a few cents. Fees have dropped more than 81% from a year earlier, reflecting a deliberate shift away from short-term revenue toward long-term usage.

Supply tightens as capital shifts

While exchange-traded products have recorded outflows exceeding $1.5 billion in the past six weeks, on-chain data indicates a tightening liquid supply. About 32.4% of all circulating ETH, or roughly 39.6 million tokens, is now locked in staking contracts, signaling strong long-term commitment from network participants.

At the same time, Ethereum’s share of total value locked in DeFi has declined. The network now represents around 54% of the sector, with roughly $70 billion locked, as capital increasingly spreads across competing blockchains.

Outlook hinges on scaling and upgrades

Traders are closely watching whether Ethereum’s expanding on-chain economy, which includes more than $203 billion in tokenized assets, can offset near-term pressure from fund outflows and reduced fee revenue.

Sentiment has also been weighed down by delays to the next major upgrade, known as “Glamsterdam,” now expected in the third quarter of 2026. The upgrade is anticipated to further lower transaction costs and expand network capacity, potentially reinforcing Ethereum’s position as the leading open blockchain infrastructure.


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