David Walsh, a veteran of the Ethereum Foundation’s institutional team, has launched Ethereum Institutional, an independent nonprofit designed to act as a dedicated “front door” for Wall Street banks and asset managers.
The organization, which officially debuted on July 1, 2026, aims to help financial institutions navigate the complex Ethereum ecosystem as they explore tokenization, stablecoins, and digital asset infrastructure. By serving as a neutral counterpart, the nonprofit intends to translate institutional requirements into scalable onchain deployments.
Simplifying Ethereum for global financial institutions
The founding team consists of David Walsh, Marius Smith, and Matthew Dawson, all of whom previously managed enterprise engagement at the Ethereum Foundation. This new entity emerges as the Ethereum Foundation itself undergoes a significant restructuring, narrowing its focus to core protocol research while encouraging independent organizations to lead business development.
The founders believe that operating outside the Foundation offers greater autonomy to support teams aggressively and provide opinionated guidance to traditional finance leaders.
Global banks have long expressed that the decentralized ecosystem is “overwhelming” due to the thousands of independent teams working within it. Ethereum Institutional seeks to solve this by providing a single point of contact that does not promote any specific commercial product.
According to Matthew Dawson, the organization will act as a “crypto sherpa,” helping firms evaluate infrastructure providers and use cases like digital asset settlement. This neutral stance is designed to give compliance-focused institutions the confidence to move from experimental pilots to permanent deployments.
The mission is deeply rooted in education and market intelligence. As the Ethereum network outlook strengthens through increased professional activity, the nonprofit will focus on aligning industry standards and coordinating institutional events. The founding team’s reach is extensive, having built more than 500 institutional relationships during their tenure at the Ethereum Foundation.
These firms represent approximately $250 trillion in combined assets under management, underscoring the scale of potential blockchain integration.
Institutional momentum is already building behind the scenes. Major players like BlackRock have launched tokenization initiatives on Ethereum, while French banking giant Crédit Agricole recently introduced EURXT, a euro-backed stablecoin compliant with Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) standards. These professionalized deployments highlight a growing obsession among banks for the security and lack of downtime inherent in decentralized networks, traits that translate directly into operational resilience.
Restructuring at the Ethereum Foundation
The launch of Ethereum Institutional coincides with a “major reset” at the Ethereum Foundation (EF). Recently, the EF has moved to decentralize its roles, resulting in staff layoffs and a 40% reduction in its operating budget.
This “principle of subtraction” is intended to let the Foundation focus on stewarding the protocol’s technical roadmap while specialized nonprofits take over ecosystem growth. This shift follows a period of leadership departures within the Foundation as it transitions toward a more focused research model.
This organizational evolution mirrors the recent launch of EthLabs, a separate nonprofit focused on supporting ecosystem development. While the market reacts to institutional ETF outflows, these new nonprofits are building the long-term infrastructure required to bridge the gap between cypherpunk values and Wall Street demands.
Board members for the new organization include Joseph Chalom of SharpLink and Thomas Lee of BitMine, whose firms provide anchor funding alongside Ethereum co-founder Joseph Lubin.
BitMine and SharpLink are among the corporate entities backing the initiative, reflecting a broader trend where investor sentiment turns toward long-term utility. Joseph Chalom, the Chief Executive of SharpLink, noted that conditions have rarely aligned so well for institutional adoption. He emphasized that financial leaders are now moving from mere interest to direct action across a variety of onchain financial market infrastructures.
Establishing a global presence in financial hubs
Ethereum Institutional plans to maintain a presence in key global financial centers to accommodate varying local regulatory environments. Initially operating across eight cities, the organization has identified New York, London, Hong Kong, and Singapore as its primary hubs. From these locations, the team will facilitate dialogue between developers and bank boards, aiming to make Ethereum the “foundational layer” for modern finance.
The transition toward an independent nonprofit model allows the team to address the regulatory and compliance barriers that often stall institutional projects. David Walsh noted that financial leaders need a counterpart they can call for “honest answers” regarding protocol security and scalability.
By proactively addressing these hurdles, the team expects to accelerate the journey for asset managers and custodians looking to leverage Ethereum’s $180 billion stablecoin market and dominant share in tokenized assets.
Ultimately, Walsh sees the future of Ethereum as a broad “internet” of value with space for decentralized finance, cross-border payments, and traditional banking. As institutions move deeper into onchain finance, the guidance provided by Ethereum Institutional will be critical in ensuring these new systems are built to professional standards.
The organization’s success will likely be measured by how many of its 500-plus institutional connections successfully deploy permanent, scalable products on the network.
