Relying on staking to "passively earn" ETH: SharpLink's treasury strategy is continuously growing


SharpLink disclosed on the X platform that since launching its Ethereum treasury strategy, its Ethereum staking rewards have reached 18,309 ETH.
In just one week, an additional 459 ETH in staking rewards was earned.
This set of data conveys a very clear message:
ETH is not just a trading asset, but is also becoming a "yield-generating asset."
In the past, people were used to measuring returns by price fluctuations, but now more and more institutions are doing one thingโ€”
Turning ETH into a "tool that continuously generates cash flow."
The essence of staking rewards is a combination of network security and capital returns:
You provide liquidity and security, and the system rewards you.
Why is this worth paying attention to?
Because it changes a traditional perception:
๐Ÿ‘‰ Crypto assets are no longer just "buy-sell speculation," but are beginning to have a "interest structure."
When an asset has both price volatility potential and stable income sources, its valuation logic will be rewritten.
But we also need to see reality clearly:
Staking rewards are not risk-free returns; they are more like a "long-term holding compensation mechanism."
The true core still depends on the asset's own cyclical performance.
To be honest:
The market has never rewarded only traders; it rewards those who can "hold long-term and understand the asset structure."
Short-term depends on judgment, long-term depends on structure;
Short-term profits from volatility, long-term profits from the system.
Remember one thing:
When an asset starts generating its own income, it is no longer just a price, but a system.
Follow me to understand the real profit logic behind crypto assets.
โ€#WCTCไบคๆ˜“็Ž‹PK #Strategyๅธ็ญน้€Ÿๅบฆ่ถ…ๆŒ–็Ÿฟไธคๅ€ #Aave่”ๅˆๅคšๆ–นๅฏๅŠจrsETHๅ…จ้ข่ต„ไบงไฟฎๅค่ฎกๅˆ’ $BTC $ETH
BTC0.87%
ETH1.33%
View Original
post-image
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments