The post Ethereum’s Co-Founder Proposes Idea For Onchain Gas Futures appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has floated the idea for an onchain futures market for gas, which could give users certainty over transaction fees as the network becomes more widely adopted. In a post on X on Saturday, Buterin argued that the market needs a “good trustless onchain gas futures market,” as people have been questioning him over the certainty of low gas fees via current price reduction methods in Ethereum’s roadmap. Buterin outlined that one way to address the uncertainty would be to enable users to essentially lock in prices for specific times in the future, as he outlined one potential market for Ethereum Base fees — a crucial factor in the overall gas fees.  How an Ethereum gas futures market would work In a traditional futures market, contracts are offered to buy or sell assets, such as oil, at a set price in the future, enabling investors to speculate on price changes and producers to hedge against future risks.  In an Ethereum context, the futures market would essentially do the same, offer gas fees at set prices at future time windows, allowing users of the network to potentially save on future price spikes if they occur. Source: Vitalik Buterin As such, a well-established and reliable futures market would provide a key metric for the ecosystem to speculate, plan or build around. “An onchain gas futures market would help solve this: people would get a clear signal of people’s expectations of future gas fees, and would even be able to hedge against future gas prices, effectively prepaying for any specific quantity of gas in a specific time interval,” he said.  A functional prediction market such as this would provide an essential service for users with heavy volume on the network, such as traders, builders, applications and institutions, who require a… The post Ethereum’s Co-Founder Proposes Idea For Onchain Gas Futures appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has floated the idea for an onchain futures market for gas, which could give users certainty over transaction fees as the network becomes more widely adopted. In a post on X on Saturday, Buterin argued that the market needs a “good trustless onchain gas futures market,” as people have been questioning him over the certainty of low gas fees via current price reduction methods in Ethereum’s roadmap. Buterin outlined that one way to address the uncertainty would be to enable users to essentially lock in prices for specific times in the future, as he outlined one potential market for Ethereum Base fees — a crucial factor in the overall gas fees.  How an Ethereum gas futures market would work In a traditional futures market, contracts are offered to buy or sell assets, such as oil, at a set price in the future, enabling investors to speculate on price changes and producers to hedge against future risks.  In an Ethereum context, the futures market would essentially do the same, offer gas fees at set prices at future time windows, allowing users of the network to potentially save on future price spikes if they occur. Source: Vitalik Buterin As such, a well-established and reliable futures market would provide a key metric for the ecosystem to speculate, plan or build around. “An onchain gas futures market would help solve this: people would get a clear signal of people’s expectations of future gas fees, and would even be able to hedge against future gas prices, effectively prepaying for any specific quantity of gas in a specific time interval,” he said.  A functional prediction market such as this would provide an essential service for users with heavy volume on the network, such as traders, builders, applications and institutions, who require a…

Ethereum’s Co-Founder Proposes Idea For Onchain Gas Futures

2025/12/08 12:14

Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has floated the idea for an onchain futures market for gas, which could give users certainty over transaction fees as the network becomes more widely adopted.

In a post on X on Saturday, Buterin argued that the market needs a “good trustless onchain gas futures market,” as people have been questioning him over the certainty of low gas fees via current price reduction methods in Ethereum’s roadmap.

Buterin outlined that one way to address the uncertainty would be to enable users to essentially lock in prices for specific times in the future, as he outlined one potential market for Ethereum Base fees — a crucial factor in the overall gas fees. 

How an Ethereum gas futures market would work

In a traditional futures market, contracts are offered to buy or sell assets, such as oil, at a set price in the future, enabling investors to speculate on price changes and producers to hedge against future risks. 

In an Ethereum context, the futures market would essentially do the same, offer gas fees at set prices at future time windows, allowing users of the network to potentially save on future price spikes if they occur.

Source: Vitalik Buterin

As such, a well-established and reliable futures market would provide a key metric for the ecosystem to speculate, plan or build around.

“An onchain gas futures market would help solve this: people would get a clear signal of people’s expectations of future gas fees, and would even be able to hedge against future gas prices, effectively prepaying for any specific quantity of gas in a specific time interval,” he said. 

A functional prediction market such as this would provide an essential service for users with heavy volume on the network, such as traders, builders, applications and institutions, who require a level of certainty for projecting operation costs. 

Ethereum gas fees have fallen throughout 2025

The idea from Buterin comes at when Ethereum’s average gas fees for basic transactions are sitting at around 0.474 gwei, or $0.01 at the time of writing, according to data from Etherscan.

Related: Ether supply squeeze looms with exchanges holding lowest levels since 2015

However, for more complex transactions such as token swaps, NFT sales and bridging assets, the average costs are sitting at around $0.16, $0.27 and $0.05.

While Ethereum transaction fees have continued to decline in 2025, the average costs across all types of transactions have seen many spikes and crashes. Data from Ycharts shows that the average fee started the year at $1 and has since declined to $0.30, with surges to as high as $2.60 and crashes to as low as $0.18 along the way. 

Ethereum transaction fee fluctuations in 2025. Source: Ycharts 

Magazine: Solana vs Ethereum ETFs, Facebook’s influence on Bitwise: Hunter Horsley

Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/vitalik-buterin-floats-futures-market-allowing-users-prepay-gas-fees?utm_source=rss_feed&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss_partner_inbound

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

The Future of Secure Messaging: Why Decentralization Matters

The Future of Secure Messaging: Why Decentralization Matters

The post The Future of Secure Messaging: Why Decentralization Matters appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. From encrypted chats to decentralized messaging Encrypted messengers are having a second wave. Apps like WhatsApp, iMessage and Signal made end-to-end encryption (E2EE) a default expectation. But most still hinge on phone numbers, centralized servers and a lot of metadata, such as who you talk to, when, from which IP and on which device. That is what Vitalik Buterin is aiming at in his recent X post and donation. He argues the next steps for secure messaging are permissionless account creation with no phone numbers or Know Your Customer (KYC) and much stronger metadata privacy. In that context he highlighted Session and SimpleX and sent 128 Ether (ETH) to each to keep pushing in that direction. Session is a good case study because it tries to combine E2E encryption with decentralization. There is no central message server, traffic is routed through onion paths, and user IDs are keys instead of phone numbers. Did you know? Forty-three percent of people who use public WiFi report experiencing a data breach, with man-in-the-middle attacks and packet sniffing against unencrypted traffic among the most common causes. How Session stores your messages Session is built around public key identities. When you sign up, the app generates a keypair locally and derives a Session ID from it with no phone number or email required. Messages travel through a network of service nodes using onion routing so that no single node can see both the sender and the recipient. (You can see your message’s node path in the settings.) For asynchronous delivery when you are offline, messages are stored in small groups of nodes called “swarms.” Each Session ID is mapped to a specific swarm, and your messages are stored there encrypted until your client fetches them. Historically, messages had a default time-to-live of about two weeks…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/12/08 14:40
Grayscale Files Sui Trust as 21Shares Launches First SUI ETF Amid Rising Demand

Grayscale Files Sui Trust as 21Shares Launches First SUI ETF Amid Rising Demand

The post Grayscale Files Sui Trust as 21Shares Launches First SUI ETF Amid Rising Demand appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The Grayscale Sui Trust filing and 21Shares’ launch of the first SUI ETF highlight surging interest in regulated Sui investments. These products offer investors direct exposure to the SUI token through spot-style structures, simplifying access to the Sui blockchain’s growth without direct custody needs, amid expanding altcoin ETF options. Grayscale’s spot Sui Trust seeks to track SUI price performance for long-term holders. 21Shares’ SUI ETF provides leveraged exposure, targeting traders with 2x daily returns. Early trading data shows over 4,700 shares exchanged, with volumes exceeding $24 per unit in the debut session. Explore Grayscale Sui Trust filing and 21Shares SUI ETF launch: Key developments in regulated Sui investments for 2025. Stay informed on altcoin ETF trends. What is the Grayscale Sui Trust? The Grayscale Sui Trust is a proposed spot-style investment product filed via S-1 registration with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, aimed at providing investors with direct exposure to the SUI token’s price movements. This trust mirrors the performance of SUI, the native cryptocurrency of the Sui blockchain, minus applicable fees, offering a regulated avenue for long-term participation in the network’s ecosystem. By holding SUI assets on behalf of investors, it eliminates the need for individuals to manage token storage or transactions directly. ⚡ LATEST: GRAYSCALE FILES S-1 FOR $SUI TRUSTThe “Grayscale Sui Trust,” is a spot-style ETF designed to provide direct exposure to the $SUI token. Grayscale’s goal is to mirror SUI’s market performance, minus fees, giving long-term investors a regulated, hassle-free way to… pic.twitter.com/mPQMINLrYC — CryptosRus (@CryptosR_Us) December 6, 2025 How does the 21Shares SUI ETF differ from traditional funds? The 21Shares SUI ETF, launched under the ticker TXXS, introduces a leveraged approach with 2x daily exposure to SUI’s price fluctuations, utilizing derivatives for amplified returns rather than direct spot holdings. This structure appeals to short-term…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/12/08 14:20