Ethereum’s Supply Squeeze and the Glamsterdam Overhaul
As Ethereum prepares for its most significant protocol upgrade since transitioning to Proof-of-Stake, a simultaneous contraction in the supply of its native token is creating a unique market dynamic. The ambitious hard fork, codenamed Glamsterdam and tentatively scheduled for the first half of 2026, arrives at a time when available ETH is becoming increasingly scarce through multiple channels.
A Multi-Front Supply Constriction
The circulating supply of Ethereum is tightening considerably. A record-breaking 38.5 million ETH, representing nearly 32% of the total supply, is currently locked in staking contracts. This substantial stake is complemented by corporate treasuries, where publicly traded companies hold an additional 7.4 million ETH on their balance sheets. Concurrently, the proportion of ETH held on exchanges has dwindled to just 12% of the total supply.
This trend was underscored this week by Bitmine, which expanded its position by 71,252 ETH. The firm now holds 4.8 million tokens, approximately 3.98% of all ETH, with a stated goal of reaching a 5% stake. When staking locks, corporate holdings, and exchange outflows are aggregated, close to 50% of the ETH supply is effectively removed from active trading.
Further demand catalysts may be on the horizon. Asset management giants BlackRock and Fidelity have filed applications for staking-based Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs). These proposed products would offer investors exposure to ETH’s price movement alongside potential annual staking yields of 3.5% to 4%. In a related development, Charles Schwab—which oversees nearly $12 trillion in client assets—has announced plans to introduce spot trading for both Bitcoin and Ether in the first half of 2026.
Near-term sentiment, however, faces pressure from geopolitical uncertainty. Traders remain on alert due to threats of escalation in Middle Eastern conflicts and their potential impact on crucial shipping routes like the Strait of Hormuz. Despite this, ETH currently trades roughly 30% below its 200-day moving average, even as the foundational groundwork for the latter half of 2026 is being laid.
The Glamsterdam Upgrade: A Deep Architectural Shift
Scheduled for mid-2026, the Glamsterdam hard fork represents a profound technical evolution for the Ethereum network, bundling two core improvements.
The first, known as EIP-7732, aims to integrate the block-building process directly into the core protocol. This change would drastically reduce the network’s current 80-90% reliance on external relay services like MEV-Boost. The second proposal, EIP-7928, introduces Block-Level Access Lists alongside a comprehensive repricing of transaction fees (gas). Developers project this combination could lower costs for users by up to 78.6%, benefiting everything from simple transfers to complex smart contract interactions.
For decentralized finance (DeFi) participants, a key outcome could be a reduction in Maximum Extractable Value (MEV) gains derived from transaction reordering by as much as 70%, leading to more equitable execution prices. Furthermore, planned incremental increases to the gas limit are designed to scale Ethereum’s throughput toward a target of 10,000 transactions per second.
The upgrade is not without potential trade-offs. Ethereum researcher Toni Wahrstätter has cautioned that EIP-7732 may introduce a latency of approximately two seconds in transaction inclusion. He has launched the tool txdelay.xyz to monitor and measure these potential delay effects.
Testing is underway, with Devnet-4 completed and Devnet-5 currently active. While developers have cited June 2026 as a target, they emphasize the date remains fluid. Given the complexity of integrating the new execution-layer Proposer-Builder Separation (ePBS) with Block-Level Access Lists—a combination untested at mainnet scale—a delay into the third or fourth quarter of 2026 is considered a realistic possibility.
Solana Implements Continuous Security Framework Following Major Exploit
In response to the devastating $270 million exploit on Drift Protocol less than two weeks ago, the Solana Foundation is enacting significant changes. The network is moving away from traditional, one-time audits by adopting a new, continuous security framework. This strategic shift comes as the SOL token price continues to demonstrate weakness, while fundamental metrics like a new all-time high for denominated Total Value Locked (TVL) and substantial developer grants point to underlying structural growth.
A Shift from Snapshots to Sustained Security
The foundation, in collaboration with Asymmetric Research, has launched the STRIDE program. This initiative aims to provide superior protection for DeFi protocols by funding ongoing surveillance, moving beyond reliance on periodic smart contract audits that become obsolete with each code update.
The security system is tiered based on a protocol’s TVL. Projects with over $10 million locked will benefit from active, round-the-clock threat monitoring. For protocols exceeding the $100 million threshold, formal verification tools will be deployed. These tools utilize mathematical proofs to verify all possible execution paths within smart contracts. Concurrently, the Solana Incident Response Network (SIRN) has been established. This coalition of five security firms is designed to offer a coordinated, real-time response during a crisis, providing project teams with a clear point of contact before significant capital outflows occur.
Ecosystem Growth: Developer Funding and Capital Inflows
Alongside its security offensive, the Solana ecosystem is pushing forward with foundational growth initiatives. The recently relaunched Frontier Hackathon is offering $2.5 million in prizes from a venture fund, with selected startups eligible for up to $250,000 in pre-seed financing.
Institutional engagement is also strengthening. DeFi Development Corp., listed on Nasdaq, reported treasury holdings of approximately 2.22 million SOL for the previous month. This fundamental strength is mirrored on-chain. The SOL-denominated TVL has surpassed 80 million, achieving a new record high. Capital is increasingly circulating within the network rather than being withdrawn during periods of market stress.
Market Valuation Lags Behind Structural Progress
These architectural advances stand in sharp contrast to the token’s current market performance. SOL is trading at $79.85, marking a decline of nearly 37% since the start of the year. However, the foundation’s decision to directly fund large-scale, continuous security operations signals a strategic pivot. By bridging the gap between pure on-chain correctness and operational security, the network is architecturally preparing for anticipated institutional capital inflows.
Solana Unveils Post-Hack Security Overhaul and Ecosystem Growth Initiatives
In response to a $270 million exploit on the DeFi platform Drift Protocol, the Solana Foundation has announced a structural security upgrade for its ecosystem. The foundation, in collaboration with security firm Asymmetric Research, introduced two new programs on April 6, 2026. This security push coincides with the launch of the Frontier Hackathon, now the largest online startup competition in the cryptocurrency space.
A Shift from Periodic Audits to Continuous Protection
The initiative’s cornerstone is STRIDE, a tiered evaluation and monitoring program available to all protocols built on Solana. Moving beyond one-time audits, the foundation-funded program provides continuous security scaled according to a protocol’s size and risk profile.
Protocols holding over $10 million in Total Value Locked (TVL) will gain access to round-the-clock security support and real-time threat monitoring. For the largest protocols—those with a TVL exceeding $100 million—the foundation will finance formal verification. This mathematical method tests every possible execution path of a smart contract, eliminating entire categories of vulnerabilities that conventional audits might miss.
STRIDE is complemented by the Solana Incident Response Network (SIRN), a coalition featuring security companies like OtterSec, Neodyme, and Asymmetric Research. SIRN’s role is to coordinate real-time responses during an active attack on a protocol, with clear prioritization based on TVL and risk level.
Addressing the Human Factor Beyond Code
A critical insight from the Drift incident is what these new programs cannot prevent. In that attack, the smart contracts themselves were sound and had passed audits. North Korean actors spent six months cultivating relationships with employees, compromised their devices through a manipulated code repository and a fraudulent application, and subsequently used legitimate multi-signature approvals to drain the vaults.
Neither formal verification nor real-time monitoring would have stopped this breach because the transactions were technically correct and indistinguishable from legitimate administrative actions. The vulnerability existed entirely in the human element of security.
Ecosystem Momentum Amid Market Challenges
Alongside the security offensive, the Frontier Hackathon commenced on April 6, backed by $2.5 million in funding from Colosseum’s venture fund. Up to ten startups may be accepted into the associated accelerator program, with submissions open until May 11. Selected winners will receive $250,000 and gain entry into the accelerator.
Despite broader market pressures—SOL has declined approximately 38% since the start of the year—the network’s internal liquidity structure shows signs of resilience. The SOL-denominated TVL surpassed 80 million SOL, reaching an all-time high. This metric suggests capital is being redeployed within the ecosystem rather than exiting it. Developer activity also hit a milestone in March, with over 10,000 unique developers now active on the network.