Executive Director David Walsh and founding team members Marius Smith and Matthew Dawson officially launched Ethereum Institutional on July 1, 2026. This independent non-profit organization is designed to serve as a neutral point of contact for global financial firms evaluating the blockchain for tokenization and stablecoins.
The launch comes as the Ethereum Foundation (EF) narrows its focus to core protocol stewardship, leaving a gap for specialized entities to handle institutional engagement.
Founding team leverages deep institutional relationships
The organization aims to provide an “independent front door” for banks and asset managers that require a non-commercial entity to guide long-term infrastructure decisions. This shift follows significant restructuring at the Ethereum Foundation earlier this year. In June 2026, the EF reduced its 2026 operating budget by 40% and eliminated approximately 20% of its 270-person staff to streamline operations around technical development.
Ethereum Institutional plans to capitalize on the network’s existing dominance in high-value financial sectors. Data confirms that Ethereum’s network outlook strengthens as it continues to host approximately $180 billion in stablecoins on its mainnet. This figure represents roughly 60% of the total global stablecoin supply, while the network also hosts two-thirds of all tokenized real-world assets (RWAs).
The leadership team behind the new non-profit brings extensive experience from both traditional finance and the crypto ecosystem. Executive Director David Walsh previously spent five years building the Ethereum Foundation’s enterprise function, engaging with hundreds of institutions after a career at EY Financial Services.
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Matthew Dawson, who served as the EF’s first Enterprise Lead, adds seven years of experience from Accenture and the digital asset space.
Marius Smith joins the operational team having previously scaled a regulated European crypto custody firm and held positions at Eigen Labs and Google. Together, the founding team has already established a network of over 500 institutional relationships. They recently convened the Institutional Ethereum Forum, which included 150 senior executives from firms representing a combined $250 trillion in assets under management (AUM).
The board of directors includes Walsh alongside Thomas Lee and Joseph Chalom. The group emphasizes its non-profit status as a way to avoid commercial incentives that could favor specific vendors. “Ethereum’s neutrality is one of its greatest strengths,” the organization noted during its launch on X. “But neutrality without representation” can leave enterprises without a clear path to adopt the technology for on-chain markets.
Strategic focus on global financial hubs
While the initiative aims to serve as a gateway for Wall Street, its geographic coverage is global from day one. Initial operations are established in New York, London, Hong Kong, and Singapore. These cities act as primary intersections for traditional banking and the advancement of digital asset regulation in primary markets.
This broad footprint helps translate regional institutional requirements into technical standards for the Ethereum ecosystem.
The organization has identified five core focus areas for its work:
- Institutional Education and Engagement
- Market Intelligence
- ETH and Ecosystem Marketing
- Industry Discovery and Requirements (Standards)
- Institutional Events and Convenings
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Expansion plans are already in place for other major financial centers. The non-profit intends to appoint dedicated institutional leads in Zurich, Frankfurt, Tokyo, and Abu Dhabi. By maintaining a presence in these sovereign wealth and private banking hubs, the group seeks to ensure Ethereum remains the foundational layer for future institutional finance infrastructure.
Support from Joseph Lubin and anchor funders
Ethereum Institutional launched with backing from Bitmine Immersion Technologies, Inc. (NYSE: BMNR) and SharpLink, Inc. (NASDAQ: SBET). It also received support from Ethereum co-founder and Consensys CEO Joseph Lubin. Lubin stated that institutions are moving from interest to active action across new financial market infrastructure, making the timing of this neutral “front door” critical for the ecosystem.
By operating on a free-to-engage model, the organization remains independent of the Ethereum Foundation’s budget. This structure is intended to persuade risk-averse executives that they are receiving unbiased market intelligence. Additional institutional and individual supporters are expected to be announced in the coming weeks as the organization fills the vacuum left by the EF’s recent pivot away from business development.
Decentralizing the Ethereum leadership landscape
The establishment of Ethereum Institutional is part of a broader trend where independent organizations take on specific functions previously managed by the EF. It follows the launch of EthLabs, another initiative founded by former EF researchers aimed at strengthening the overall ecosystem. These movements reflect a “unbundling” strategy designed to make the network more resilient through decentralized governance.
The market has shown resilience amid these structural changes. As of July 1, 2026, Ethereum (ETH) is trading at more than $1,620 with a market cap of $195.4 billion, according to Coingecko data. The asset recently recovered from a low near $1,500, even as investors navigate institutional ETF outflows and broader macroeconomic shifts.
The ultimate goal for Walsh and his team is to bridge the gap between speculative crypto markets and the $250 trillion in AUM represented by their institutional partners. By focusing on tokenization and market requirements, Ethereum Institutional intends to cement the blockchain’s role as the settlement layer for the global economy, providing the stability necessary for massive liquidity to move on-chain.
