- Vitalik Buterin warned that BlackRock’s influence could push Ethereum in the wrong direction.
- Institutional pressure could lead to technical choices that exclude ordinary users.
- Ethereum needs to focus on being permissionless and censorship-resistant, he said.
Beware of BlackRock and its ilk.
If the world’s largest asset managers continue to accumulate Ether, Ethereum’s native cryptocurrency, at unprecedented rates, the network will face two key existential threats, according to Vitalik Buterin.
Buterin spoke on a panel at the Funding the Commons side event at the Devconnect conference in Buenos Aires alongside computer scientist Roger Dingledine, co-founder of privacy software Tor Project.
During the conference, in the presence of DL NewsButerin explained how institutional capture could fundamentally break what makes Ethereum valuable.
“How to avoid being captured by big behemoths like BlackRock? » Dingledine asked Buterin, referring to the flood of institutional interest that followed the launch of BlackRock’s Ethereum ETF.
Buterin’s response was direct. Institutional influence creates two specific risks that could destroy Ethereum’s core purpose.
The nine Wall Street companies that offer Ethereum exchange-traded funds now hold more than $18 billion in Ether, while treasury companies hold another $18 billion on their balance sheets.
Analysts further predict that institutions could hold more than 10% of Ethereum’s total supply in the near term.
But Buterin sees a danger in this type of success.
Indeed, since the arrival of the Wall Street behemoths, Ethereum has been facing a fundamental tension. Institutional money provides legitimacy and capital. But it also puts pressure to optimize for institutional needs – not the permissionless, censorship-resistant values that made Ethereum exciting to develop in the first place.
First threat: chasing people away
The first risk is quite simple.
When BlackRock and other institutions gain too much influence, they alienate the people who actually care about decentralization.
“It easily scares others away,” Buterin said.
The core community and builders who have spent years developing Ethereum’s infrastructure don’t want to build for Wall Street. They want to build transparent, permissionless systems, he explained.
If Ethereum becomes primarily an institutional financing tool, these builders could up and leave. And without them, Ethereum loses the technical expertise and ideological commitment that keeps it decentralized.
Second threat: poor technical choices
There is a second, more concrete threat.
Institutional pressure leads to technical decisions that could break Ethereum’s accessibility.
“Their existence easily leads to bad kinds of choices on the base layer,” said Buterin, who gave an example: block times of 150 milliseconds. Faster blocks seem perfect for high-frequency trading and institutional applications, but they create constraints impossible for ordinary users.
Worse, 150ms blocks make it “impossible to operate a node unless you’re in New York” – or another financial center with ultra-low latency connections to validators.
The result is macabre for a community based on decentralization and which sticks to man. An Ethereum optimized for Wall Street becomes an Ethereum that only Wall Street can use.
This means geographic centralization, the exclusion of privacy-conscious users, and a node operator base limited to those who can afford data centers located in Manhattan.
Limited offer
Regardless, Buterin came up with a solution.
“We need to focus on the things that would otherwise be rare: a global, permissionless, censorship-resistant protocol,” he said.
Wall Street doesn’t need Ethereum to scale quickly or settle transactions efficiently. It has systems for this. What Wall Street can’t build – and what makes Ethereum valuable – is a truly global system that anyone can access without permission or trust.
Maintaining that requires a “strong grassroots community that focuses on these things,” Buterin said.
This is not a community optimized for institutional adoption, but one committed to the values that differentiate Ethereum from traditional finance.
Pedro Solimano is DL News“Markets correspondent based in Buenos Aires. Do you have any advice? Send him an email at psolimano@dlnews.com.


