Key takeaways
Restaking is unlocking new layers of yield in Ethereum by allowing the same ETH to earn multiple rewards across different protocols. Platforms like EigenLayer and EtherFi are leading the charge, but this high reward is not without risk.
Restaking is the new gold rush in Ethereum [ETH] – A way for investors to stack multiple yields on the same coin. What started as plain staking rewards has morphed into a race of tokens, protocols, and strategies promising triple the returns.
The new gold rush!
The pitch is simple – Instead of earning a single stream of staking rewards, investors can now stack multiple yields on the same ETH. It starts with traditional staking, where validators secure Ethereum and earn around 3-4% annually.
Those staked coins are then wrapped into liquid staking tokens like stETH or rETH, which can be reused across the ecosystem. Restaking takes it further, depositing these tokens into platforms such as EigenLayer to secure other networks; unlocking an additional reward stream.
On top of that, liquid restaking tokens (LRTs) can be traded or farmed in DeFi, creating a loop of potentially three different yields from one deposit.
Restaking giants in motion
At press time, EigenLayer [EIGEN] (the top player) commanded a staggering $19.65 billion in TVL.
Annualized fees reached $72.5 million, with incentives at $87.3 million, while EIGEN traded at $1.34 and clocked $71.25 million in 24-hour volume.
Over $557 million was staked too.
Source: DefiLlama
However, EigenLayer isn’t alone.
EtherFi [ETHFI] was at around $1.06, with upside potential of 3x-6x as the leading liquid restaking platform. Renzo Protocol [REZ], at $0.012, seemed to offer a simpler entry with 4x-7x potential via ezETH.
Kelp DAO [KELP] is gearing up for a launch with strong ecosystem ties. Puffer Finance [PUFF] will decentralize validators and resist MEV, making both high-upside plays once tokens go live.
A double-edged sword
Restaking promises higher yields, more composability, and faster innovation. Alas, it’s not without risks.
Think of it like re-hypothecation in traditional finance; the same ETH being pledged multiple times across protocols. That leverage can supercharge returns, but it also stacks risk.
Smart contract exploits, slashing events from misbehaving AVSs, or LRT liquidity traps could hit stakers hard. And, with regulators circling “yield products,” oversight will be inevitable.
Restaking could be Ethereum’s next big leap. However, players need to weigh the upsides against the fragility of building multiple layers on the same foundation.