Ether isn’t exactly close to record highs, but some validators are still making a move.
Markets have rotated from AI to dog coins and now back to AI, all in the same month.
Fetch.ai (FET), Render (RNDR), SingularityNET (AGIX) lead top cryptocurrencies over the past day, with each rallying between 33% and 35% as of 7:30 am ET.
All three tokens power marketplaces for decentralized computing power, which have captured imaginations ever since ChatGPT made generative AI a household term last year.
Memecoins fell the most, with pepe (PEPE), bonk (BONK), dogwifhat (WIF) and shiba inu (SHIB) losing more than 15%. (Memecoins are still the best performers over the past week.)
Bitcoin (BTC) traded flat while ether (ETH), still more than 20% below its all-time high, slipped 2.3% to below $3,800.
All eyes are on Ethereum after bitcoin briefly hit all-time highs earlier this week — as a subset of validators pull their ETH from the chain.
Still, ETH staking has exploded over the past year, from about 15% of the supply to as much as 26% earlier this week (now back to just above one quarter).
About 40% of all ETH staked (12.16 million ETH worth $46.2 billion) is with liquid staking protocols like Lido and Rocket Pool — up from 10.84 million ETH at the start of the year (under 38% of total ETH stake).
New restaking apps like EigenLayer allow users to unlock additional rewards on their staking tokens. The amount of ETH in EigenLayer has popped 75% since January, from 1.7 million ETH to almost 3 million ETH right now.
Stocks across the crypto space found their footing Wednesday alongside bitcoin.
MicroStrategy’s surge came in response to its upsizing of a fresh convertible debt offering, from $600 million to $700 million (you guessed it — it plans to buy more bitcoin with it).
MicroStrategy is up more than 100% on its bitcoin to date.
The firm already has $2.6 billion in liabilities after multiple rounds of corporate bond sales going back to 2021.
Total common shares outstanding for MSTR has nearly doubled across that period, from 7.623 million shares in December 2020 to 14.904 million at the end of last year.
Source: David Canellis – blockworks.co