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Our Obol Thesis

Wednesday, October 29 | Paul Veradittakit

When we published The Seventh Bull Cycle a few years ago, we wrote that every era of crypto builds the foundation for the next. The first wave brought digital money. The second built programmable finance. The third connected crypto to the broader economy. We predicted that this current cycle — the seventh — would be remembered for the institutionalization of blockchain infrastructure.

 

At that time, we announced our investment in Obol, a team pioneering distributed validator technology for Ethereum. It was a thesis that, on the surface, seemed highly technical with validator coordination, key generation, and slashing risk. But at its core it represented something much bigger: the decentralization and hardening of Ethereum’s base layer.

 

Today, just a few short years later, that bet has matured into what we believe is one of the most important stories in Ethereum’s evolution.

 

THE INSTITUTIONAL LAYER OF ETHEREUM

 

Ethereum has become the financial layer of the Internet.

 

Today, over $230 billion in tokenized assets, stablecoins, and DeFi collateral flow through its rails. Major institutions from Wall Street firms to global asset managers are not just building on Ethereum, but holding ETH as a productive treasury asset.

 

We called this phenomenon The Case for Digital Asset Treasuries (DATs), with public and private entities accumulating high quality digital assets (like ETH) to stake and earn yield. These firms view ETH not as a speculative token but as digital infrastructure. Their treasuries generate native yield from validating the network, not from credit or counterparty exposure.

 

This dynamic has turned staking into a core function of institutional treasury management. And that evolution has made the underlying validator layer — the infrastructure that secures Ethereum — one of the most important and least replaceable pieces of the new financial system.

 

THE STAKING ENDGAME

 

Ethereum’s proof-of-stake model transformed ETH into the world’s first Internet bond: a yield-bearing, non-sovereign asset secured by computation and decentralized economy rather than debt.

 

Today, more than 30% of ETH is staked. That figure will potentially rise above 50% by the end of the decade. This scale introduces new challenges, namely concentration risk, correlated downtime, and key management failures.

 

Traditional single-operator validators and legacy validator technology were never designed for this level of responsibility. As more institutional and sovereign capital flows into staking, reliability and decentralization become non-negotiable. The validator layer needs the same standards of redundancy, diversity, and security that define global financial infrastructure.

 

That is where Distributed Validators (DVs) come in — and where Obol has emerged as the clear leader.

 

OBOL’S ROLE IN ETHEREUM’S EVOLUTION

 

Obol’s core product, Charon, enables Distributed Validators. DV’s splits validator duties across multiple independent operators. Rather than a single key held by one entity, Obol’s technology uses Distributed Key Generation (DKG) and threshold signing so that no single operator can compromise a validator.

 

If one-third of participants go offline, the validator continues to perform. No single operator holds the full key, and no one can unilaterally act maliciously. This is a fundamental step forward in Ethereum’s resilience.

 

Today, Obol technology secures over $3 billion in total staked value across the network. It has been adopted by nearly every major staking protocol including Lido, ether.fi, StakeWise, Liquid Collective and more, as well as by professional node operators such as Blockdaemon, DSRV, Bitcoin Suisse, and ParaFi.

 

This level of adoption shows that Distributed Validators are becoming a new standard for the future of staking.

 

THE PATH FORWARD

 

The next stage of growth is clear: institutionalization.

 

Distributed Validators will likely power staking for Digital Asset Treasuries, funds, and ETFs. For these entities, DVs provide the operational security and compliance resilience needed to stake billions safely.

 

We believe the market will continue converging toward this model because it satisfies all three pillars of institutional trust:

 

  • Redundancy – no single point of failure.

  • Neutrality – no reliance on one operator or vendor.

  • Resilience – always online, even amid correlated downtime.

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As Ethereum transitions into a multi-trillion-dollar network, the infrastructure securing it must evolve at the same pace. The validator layer is now the foundation upon which the world’s future digital economy rests, and Obol is setting the standard for how that foundation should operate.

 

FUTURE OUTLOOK

 

Every cycle in crypto rewards the infrastructure that makes the system safer and more scalable. Exchanges did it in 2013. Smart contracts did it in 2017. DeFi did it in 2020. In this cycle, validator infrastructure which powers the Ethereum staking economy, has the chance to be a big winner.

 

Obol has executed with precision, building technology that works in production and is trusted by the largest names in staking. The team’s credibility, focus on neutrality, and commitment to open collaboration have made Obol synonymous with Distributed Validators themselves.

 

We invested in Obol because we believed Distributed Validators would become the endgame of Ethereum staking, and we believe that endgame is now taking shape.

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