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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 175
Wednesday, 24 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 02:32 UTC
  • UTC02:32
  • EDT22:32
  • GMT03:32
  • CET04:32
  • JST11:32
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← The MonexusOpinion

Ethereum Foundation's 20% cut is a confession, not a crisis

A 20% staff reduction, a five-cluster reorganisation, and a 40% budget trim land in the same week — Ethereum's coordinator of last resort is admitting it cannot be the coordinator of first resort anymore.

Ethereum price chart overlaid with a broken-chain graphic, June 2026. Cointelegraph

The Ethereum Foundation cut roughly 20% of its staff on 23 June 2026, capping a week in which executive director Aya Miyaguchi and several senior leaders departed, the organisation's budget shrank by an estimated 40%, and founder Vitalik Buterin sketched out a reset that re-imagines the foundation as a small, neutral steward rather than the protocol's de facto funder. Within hours, separate reporting surfaced a parallel story: a fierce internal debate over whether to tax staking rewards to fund development, set against a wave of large ETH holders and external labs bankrolling work offchain. Read together, these moves amount to a public confession of how brittle the old funding model had become.

The thesis is uncomfortable for the industry's self-image. For most of the last decade, Ethereum's development machine was run on a quiet compact: the foundation collected a treasury, hired researchers, and acted as a coordinator of last resort for client teams, grant recipients, and standards work. That compact is being unwound in real time. The layoffs, the restructure into five functional clusters, and Buterin's reset memo are not three stories; they are one story told in three different registers.

What actually changed on 23 June

The most concrete fact is the headcount. According to a 23 June 2026 report from CoinDesk, the foundation is laying off roughly 20% of its staff, a reduction that follows a period of senior-leadership turnover. The same day, telegram-channel coverage from CryptoBriefing described a reorganisation into five clusters and reiterated the 20% figure; a separate Polymarket news wire posted at 14:04 UTC also flagged the 20% layoff. Buterin's own reset memo, summarised by CryptoBriefing, frames the foundation as a smaller, more neutral actor going forward. The budget cut of around 40% gives the staff number its teeth: this is not a reorganisation on paper, it is a smaller organisation with less money.

UBS and the engineering firm Nethermind also announced this week that they had completed node-level compliance proofs of concept on Ethereum, a development that points quietly toward the institutional side of the network's near-term future, even as the public-facing governance layer contracts.

The staking 'tax' fight, restated plainly

The funding debate, surfaced by Cointelegraph, is the second front. The proposal under discussion would skim a percentage of staking rewards to pay for ongoing development — in effect, a permanent levy on validators, structured as protocol economics rather than a treasury grant. The counter-position, articulated by a growing cohort of large ETH holders and independent labs, is that public-goods funding should be a voluntary, offchain exercise: foundations, DAOs, and corporate treasuries writing cheques to specific teams for specific deliverables, with the protocol itself staying out of the redistribution business.

Both positions have merit, and both are also, plainly, fights over who gets to set the development budget. A protocol-level skim is the cleanest mechanism but it is also a hard political sell: validators are the closest thing Ethereum has to a citizenry, and taxing them without a credible governance supermajority is a recipe for a chain split. The offchain alternative preserves neutrality and keeps the protocol minimalist, but it leaves funding dependent on a handful of wealthy actors whose preferences will, over time, become the de facto roadmap.

The structural frame: coordinator of last resort, no more

The pattern here is larger than Ethereum. Across the cycle, the small foundations and nonprofits that incubated open networks have hit a wall: treasuries drawn down by bear markets, staff costs sticky in dollar terms while token revenues fell, and a public that increasingly resents the visible wealth of the people running the public infrastructure. The foundation's reset is the cleanest version of a story playing out in adjacent ecosystems too. The model that worked in 2018-2021 — raise, hire, dispense, repeat — does not work when the marginal dollar of treasury buys less than the marginal dollar of attention, and the people doing the work would rather be paid by someone they chose.

There is also a less flattering reading. A foundation that no longer pays for core research, but still claims stewardship of the protocol, is a foundation whose power is decoupled from its budget. The reset memo speaks of neutrality; the restructure speaks of capacity. Pretending the two are the same is the oldest trick in the trade.

Stakes and the road ahead

The cleanest way to read the week: Ethereum's core team is admitting, in public, that it cannot continue to play every role at once — employer, grantmaker, convener, lobbyist, standards body. The five-cluster reorganisation and the 40% budget trim are an attempt to pick one role and stick to it. The staking-tax fight will determine whether the rest of the work gets absorbed by a protocol mechanism or by a small group of offchain patrons.

What remains uncertain is whether the remaining 80% of staff can hold the line through the next protocol upgrade, and whether the new funding model — whatever it ends up being — is durable enough to survive another bear cycle. The sources do not specify the total dollar value of the trimmed budget, the composition of the five clusters, or which senior departures besides Miyaguchi's have been confirmed. Those gaps will close, or they will not, in the next few weeks.

Desk note: Monexus treated this as a governance story, not a price story. The 20% figure and the leadership turnover are the load-bearing facts; the staking-tax debate is the second front, not the lede.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/cryptobriefing
  • https://t.me/cryptobriefing
  • https://t.me/cryptobriefing
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© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire