Etherеum

Kraken’s Ogilvie says staking adoption set to skyrocket

Prior to the fall of FTX, Ethereum’s shift to proof-of-stake was all the rage in crypto circles. Two months removed from The Merge, Ethereum is still playing catch-up with more mature staking networks like Cosmos and Polkadot, but Kraken’s Tim Ogilvie thinks that’s about to change.

“It’s going to just be an absolute rocket ship as you get closer and closer to when withdrawals are enabled,” Ogilvie, Kraken’s Head of Staked, told The Block in an interview, adding that a big transition will be seen as “a huge number of assets are likely to get staked over the course of the next six to nine months.”

When Ogilvie started Staked at Kraken five years ago, a number of questions about staking remained unanswered in terms of security and whether the mechanism would work. Today the platform hosts up to $63 billion in staked assets generating $5 billion in annuitized rewards, according to acompany report.

Staking revenue percentages on Ethereum have climbed since the network’s change in consensus models, data from The Block Research show.

Staking market cultivation

The growth in the staking market took years to cultivate. Initial participants grappled over unknowns regarding returns and exact parameters on when staked assets would become available again, if ever. These factors, conflated with risks associated with a potentially exploited smart contract that might be either locked or drained by a hacker, made it difficult for anyone to stake 100% of their assets outside of die-hard crypto natives, Ogilvie said.

Driven by confidence in PoS following the success of The Merge, Ogilvie’s conversations in retail and institutional circles now reveal excitement. “You know, Kraken has a big retail base that uses the customer offering. Staked and Kraken both have a lot of big institutional clients,” he said, noting that on both sides of the coin, “everybody’s fired up about ETH.”

For an ecosystem closely watching the fall of Sam Bankman-Fried’s FTX empire, staking may be even more attractive, said Ogilvie. He thinks that the industry rises in waves that occasionally wash out players.

“A lot of what I’ve seen happen in these cycles is you get four or five people come in and two or three of them leave in the ensuing crash,” said Ogilvie, pointing out that situations are made worse when centralized funds like FTX, as well as Celsius, Voyager and Blockfi, “are playing with customer funds in a way that people shouldn’t have trusted them to do.”

Kraken had no material exposure to FTX or FTT from a core business standpoint, according to Ogilvie, who added that the resonating impact of FTX’s collapse is likely to be felt industry-wide.

In terms of the staking industry at large however, “most funds and institutions in crypto have gotten comfortable that staking is a pretty manageable risk,” Ogilvie said.

   

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