In Ethereum Bitmine news today, Kleros founder Clément Lesaege proposed a plan to the Ethereum Research forum that would allow ETH validators to redirect up to 10% of staking rewards to public goods funding.
If over 50% of staked ETH signals support this rate, it becomes mandatory for all validators, including those who opt out. For Bitmine, which holds 4.72M ETH staked via its MAVAN platform and generates $258M annually from staking, this proposal could result in a $50–100 million loss in annual income.
Lefteris Warns Validator Funding Plan Could Create Staking Cartel
Rotki founder and Ethereum developer @LefterisJP opposed a proposal to fund Ethereum core development through validator rewards, arguing it could create a cartel among large stakers capable of diverting up to… pic.twitter.com/uoKpj1OcZ2
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) June 22, 2026
Currently, this is just a forum post, not an official Ethereum Improvement Proposal (EIP), but its implications are significant, as Bitmine’s stake represents 4.49% of the total ETH staked.
The market now faces the question of whether this proposal poses a material risk to BMNR shareholders or is simply noise in the governance process.
Ethereum Bitmine News: What the 50% Threshold Actually Reveals About Institutional Staking Risk
$ETH Found some support on the previous breakout level and is trying to bounce.
This wad the first green weekly candle after a 9 consecutive down streak.
But in the end the break from the channel/flag/wedge is what I'm looking for. If that occurs, it should signal further… https://t.co/I6Ib9Wd046 pic.twitter.com/jErWy2xPP6
— Daan Crypto Trades (@DaanCrypto) June 22, 2026
The Lesaege proposal, titled Validator Redirected Revenue, addresses Ethereum’s free-rider problem by establishing a funding mechanism for shared infrastructure. Validators can declare a redirect rate of 0% to 10% of their staking rewards.
If the median rate across more than 50% of staked ETH is above zero, a universal rate is applied, meaning those who voted for 0% will still see a portion of their rewards redirected. Funds are then sent to an allocation smart contract for recipients like Gitcoin and auditing organizations.
A related mechanism, Validator Revenue Redistribution (VRR), ensures that if the majority (51%) opts in, all validators must contribute a portion of their rewards. This creates a governance challenge for large institutional validators.
The path from proposal to implementation is lengthy, requiring community support, EIP drafting, review, and more, reflecting Ethereum’s cautious approach to changes in economic parameters.
However, the proposal sets a research precedent for integrating validator economics into ETH governance, influencing how institutional risk managers assess staking yield.
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Bitmine’s MAVAN Platform: $258M in Annual Staking Revenue at Stake
In other Bitmine Ethereum news, Bitmine’s May 8-K filing revealed that 4,718,677 ETH is staked via MAVAN, accounting for 87% of its 5.42M ETH holdings. As of that date, the annualized staking yield was 2.73%, slightly below the CESR benchmark of 2.81-2.84%. The company projects $296M in gross staking rewards annually, with net revenues of $258M.
A 1% reduction in the yield on the staked ETH would cost about $94M in gross rewards per year at a $2,000 ETH price. A 10% redirection of the current yield would translate into roughly $25M per year in losses for BMNR validators.
The overall potential impact could range from $50 M to $100M, depending on factors such as validator behavior and ETH price fluctuations.
For BMNR shareholders, it’s crucial to note that a 1-basis-point shift in stake yield amounts to approximately $940,000 in annualized gross impact.
Staking revenue accounted for over 93% of Bitmine’s Q2 FY2026 revenue, and it declared a $0.01 annual dividend in January 2026, the first major crypto firm to do so from staking income.
A significant yield reduction is not something Bitmine can easily counteract operationally; the proposed ETH validator tax would be a direct hit to the asset class.
Moreover, Bitmine’s June 2026 filing for a $300M preferred stock offering implies an annual obligation of $28.5M, which may become strained in a bear scenario.
The Forum-to-EIP Pipeline: What Has to Happen Before This Becomes a Real Yield Deduction
1/
BitMine provided its latest holdings update for June 22, 2026$10.7 billion in total crypto + "moonshots":
– 5,672,956 ETH at $1,733per ETH per ETH (per @coinbase)
– 205 Bitcoin (BTC)
– $200 million stake in Beast Industries @MrBeast
– $104 million stake in Eightco Holdings…— Bitmine (NYSE-BMNR) $ETH (@BitMNR) June 22, 2026
Lesage emphasized that the research team is seeking community feedback before developing a technical implementation of an Ethereum Improvement Proposal (EIP) that has not yet been filed.
The proposal is in the early stages of Ethereum’s governance process, where many ideas may not progress, and implementation could take years.
The main concern for institutional stakers is not just this proposal’s potential passage, but what it signals about ETH governance and validator economics.
Debates around public goods funding on Ethereum have existed since before the Merge, highlighting the limitations of donation-driven models.
The VRR mechanism and Lesaege’s proposal mark a significant shift towards integrating funding solutions at the consensus layer, which carries more weight than individual EIP outcomes.
For institutional risk managers, the relevant framework is tail-risk disclosure, not base-case modeling. Even if this proposal doesn’t advance, the staking yield policy space in Ethereum is now an open governance issue.
Public companies that earn a substantial portion of their revenue from ETH staking must account for this evolving landscape, as governance-layer risks have often been underestimated until they affect financial statements.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Always conduct independent research before making investment decisions.
