BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, has signaled fresh interest in the Ethereum ecosystem after registering a new statutory trust in Delaware on Wednesday, hinting at plans for a staked Ethereum exchange-traded fund (ETF).
The trust, named the iShares Staked Ethereum Trust ETF, was formed on November 19, according to public records from the Delaware Division of Corporations.

While the listing does not include product details, the registration marks the earliest public stage of ETF creation, an initial step that often precedes a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
BlackRock has not yet submitted any registration documents to the SEC, and the timing of the next move remains uncertain.
Why BlackRock’s Move Matters Now
The popularity of staking-enabled ETFs has increased at an extremely fast rate in the United States because regulators have approved the first products that transfer staking rewards directly to shareholders.
For Ethereum investors, staking represents a key part of the ecosystem, as it allows holders to lock up ETH to help validate transactions and secure the network. In return, they earn a reward, which currently averages around 3.95% annually, according to Blocknative.
Despite the fact that a number of crypto asset managers already provide staking-enabled Ethereum ETFs, the U.S. market is young and comparatively small. BlackRock’s entry, if it progresses, could shift the landscape significantly due to the company’s dominant influence in the ETF industry.
Key BlackRock Executive Behind Filing
The Delaware registration was submitted by Daniel Schweiger, a BlackRock managing director who also filed the firm’s first iShares Ethereum Trust (ETHA) in late 2023. His involvement strongly suggests that the new trust is part of BlackRock’s broader crypto ETF roadmap.
Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas called the filing a clear signal that a formal SEC submission is “coming soon,” though he noted that Delaware registrations sometimes precede regulatory filings by several weeks or months.
BlackRock is planning to file for a Staked Ethereum ETF, as per the Delaware name registration. '33 Act. Filing coming soon. pic.twitter.com/NmAsQhcq5D
— Eric Balchunas (@EricBalchunas) November 19, 2025
BlackRock Signals Shift Toward Staking
The new filing marks a notable shift for BlackRock. At the time ETHA was launched in July 2024, the company specifically refused to include staking because of the complexities of its operations and regulatory concerns.
Despite that stance, in July, BlackRock submitted a rule change with the SEC to consider the addition of staking to ETHA, a sign that the company was reconsidering how to add yield-generating functionality to Ethereum products.
The company’s latest move suggests it is now prepared to introduce a fully dedicated staked Ethereum product rather than upgrading its flagship ETHA ETF.
That product has already grown into the largest Ethereum ETF in the U.S., with nearly $11.5 billion in assets under management, according to SoSoValue. Despite heavy inflows since launch, ETHA faced $165 million in outflows during the recent crypto market downturn.
How the ETF Market Evolved
The broader ETF landscape changed significantly in the past year. Regulators in the second Trump administration adopted a more permissive stance toward crypto financial products and introduced a generic listing standard for crypto ETPs, speeding up approvals and reducing the need for case-by-case reviews.
This change enabled issuers like Grayscale and REX-Osprey to launch ETFs that incorporate native staking rewards. In October, Grayscale became the first company to activate staking for its U.S. Ethereum Trust ETFs, offering a regulated benchmark for how staking rewards can be distributed to investors.
REX-Osprey, meanwhile, launched the first combined spot Ethereum and staking ETF in late September, though the fund remains small, with only $2.4 million in assets as of mid-November.
Why Staked ETFs Could Attract New Investors
A staking Ethereum ETF is not just a price exposure. It develops a total-return product, which combines the market performance of ETF with a consistent flow of rewards, which may be appealing to yield-seeking investors who have traditionally sought income elsewhere.
In the case of large institutions that are unable to stake directly because of compliance or technical constraints, a regulated ETF might offer the easiest way to earn ETH yield without managing private keys, validators, or custody risk.
However, staking also introduces new regulatory challenges. Fund issuers must explain validator selection, reward distribution, liquidity management, slashing risks, and custody segregation, issues that the SEC has treated with caution.
BlackRock Remains Selective with Crypto Expansion
Despite its aggressive push into Bitcoin and Ethereum products, BlackRock has largely avoided the recent wave of altcoin ETF filings.
Rather, the company has concentrated on the fundamental assets and cash-generating initiatives, such as its Bitcoin Premium Income ETF, which trades covered calls to generate yield.
An indexed Ethereum ETF would also be a good addition to the current strategy of BlackRock, providing mainstream investors with a crypto exposure with regulated income characteristics.
What Comes Next
BlackRock still needs to file a registration statement under the Securities Act of 1933 before shares of the new trust can trade publicly.
This process could take weeks or months. More than 70 crypto ETF applications are currently awaiting SEC action after delays related to the U.S. government shutdown in October and November.
If BlackRock proceeds, the launch will be another landmark in the Ethereum ETF market, which can potentially push staking products into the mainstream and establish the foundation of more widespread institutional adoption.

