His latest comments make clear that Ethereum’s roadmap is not aligned with what venture capital is currently incentivizing – and that divergence is intentional.
Buterin’s core message is not about short-term market trends, but about power. He sees many of today’s popular crypto products as rebuilding centralized control behind a blockchain façade: custodial finance apps, profit-maximized platforms, and tightly managed financial rails that resemble banks more than permissionless systems.
In contrast, Ethereum is still optimized around reducing dependency on trusted intermediaries. That choice, Buterin suggests, makes Ethereum less attractive to investors chasing fast returns, but more aligned with its original purpose – giving individuals sovereignty over their assets and financial activity.
Buterin points to stablecoins as the clearest example of where crypto’s ambitions clash with reality. Despite widespread adoption, most stablecoins today depend heavily on the U.S. dollar, embedding the assumptions of the existing monetary system directly into crypto infrastructure.
That dependency works when the dollar is stable, but it creates a hidden fragility. If inflation, policy shifts, or structural stress hit the dollar over long timeframes, crypto systems built on top of it may inherit those weaknesses rather than escape them.
Even worse, many supporting components – especially price data mechanisms – concentrate influence in the hands of capital-heavy players. From Buterin’s perspective, that undermines decentralization at a foundational level, even if the base chain itself remains permissionless.
One of the most uncomfortable points in Buterin’s thinking is that Ethereum may be fighting itself. Staking ETH offers relatively strong and predictable returns, making it economically rational to stake rather than deploy capital into decentralized monetary experiments.
This creates a paradox: the mechanism that secures Ethereum also competes with efforts to build resilient, decentralized stablecoins on top of it. As long as staking remains the most attractive use of ETH, alternative financial primitives struggle to gain traction.
Buterin does not pretend there is a silver bullet. Lowering staking rewards could weaken network security. Redesigning staking introduces new attack surfaces. Allowing staked ETH to be reused elsewhere increases systemic risk, especially during sharp market drawdowns.
He also warns that stress scenarios matter more than ideal conditions. Systems that look stable during calm markets often fail under extreme volatility, which is precisely when decentralized finance is supposed to prove its value.
Ultimately, Buterin is signaling that Ethereum is not competing to be the most profitable or fastest-moving crypto ecosystem. It is competing on durability. He argues that systems driven purely by financial incentives tend to centralize and extract value over time, even if they scale quickly.
Ethereum’s approach accepts slower progress and harder engineering problems in exchange for a chance at something more robust: a financial system that does not depend on trusted issuers, dominant intermediaries, or concentrated capital to function.
In that sense, Ethereum is not lagging behind the VC narrative. It is choosing not to follow it at all.
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