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Your Three Minutes In Digital Assets: Decentralization Drives Ethereum’s Resilience

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Your Three Minutes In Digital Assets: Decentralization Drives Ethereum’s Resilience

The historic IT outage on July 19 highlighted key threats to global systems from interdependency and concentration. With the launch of ether-backed exchange-traded funds (ETFs) on July 23, investors are assessing the prospects of the Ethereum network. S&P Global Ratings believes that Ethereum's decentralization supports its operational resilience, but that it is critical to understand its concentration risks and how these may evolve.

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What's Happening

The July 19 global IT outage highlighted single points of failure in existing systems.   Ethereum and other major public blockchains were not affected this time. As more financial market activity moves into the Ethereum ecosystem, understanding and monitoring concentration risks will be key.

Why It Matters

Ethereum may increasingly act as a settlement layer for financial markets.   In recent months, we have seen issuance of digital bonds on public blockchains, as well as Blackrock's issuance of the BUIDL fund on Ethereum. These are significant innovations as public blockchains such as Ethereum play a part in solving the interoperability challenges that so far inhibit blockchain adoption. To date, digital bond issuers have primarily used private permissioned blockchains, each of these being a "walled garden" set up by a specific institution. This does not support a liquid secondary market for these bonds to trade and so hinders wider adoption.

Understanding and monitoring Ethereum's concentration risks is key.   Ethereum requires the consensus of two-thirds of the network's validators to finalize each new block added to the chain. If more than one-third of the validators are offline at once, blocks cannot be finalized. It's therefore crucial to monitor any concentration risk that could cause this to happen. As noted in the chart above:

  • No single entity controls one-third of validator nodes. The largest staking concentration (29%) is through the Lido decentralized staking protocol: these nodes share an exposure to Lido's smart contract risk, but are operated by several different operators.
  • Diversification of client software packages run by validators (consensus and execution clients) mitigates the risk of a network outage resulting from any bug in this software. This is a strength over most public blockchains, which currently use a single client. Client concentration risk persists, however, as seen in the network's only delayed finality event in May 2023.
  • Validators are not concentrated through a single cloud provider: the largest exposure hosted by a single provider is only 17% of validators.

(For more information, see "What Can You Trust In A Trustless System: Public Blockchains For Financial Applications," Oct. 11, 2023)

What's Next

Regulatory developments may smooth the path for increased competition in U.S. crypto custody markets.   Specifically, the Security and Exchange Commission's (SEC) rule "Special Accounting Bulletin (SAB) 121" currently requires entities holding crypto assets in custody for their clients to report these assets on their balance sheet with a corresponding liability. This makes it prohibitively expensive for U.S. banks to provide custody for crypto assets. Earlier this year, the House and Senate voted to repeal SAB 121, but this was vetoed by President Biden and the rule remains in place.

As a result of SAB 121, there is little competition for crypto custody services in the U.S. Indeed, the custody of bitcoin held in ETFs is highly concentrated with a small number of providers. We expect this to be similar for ether ETFs upon their launch. Initially, these ETFs will not stake the underlying ether, therefore concentration among custody providers will not affect concentration risks in the network itself. This may eventually change: some applications initially contemplated staking but removed this prior to approval, and staking products exist in other countries. A competitive market for staking custodians at that point would help to mitigate staking concentration risks (see chart and related research).

Related Research

This report does not constitute a rating action.

Primary Credit Analyst:Andrew O'Neill, CFA, London + 44 20 7176 3578;
andrew.oneill@spglobal.com
Secondary Contact:Lapo Guadagnuolo, London + 44 20 7176 3507;
lapo.guadagnuolo@spglobal.com

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