
According to fresh on-chain data, the Ethereum Foundation has moved 1,000 ETH - worth around $3.15 million - into a lesser-known address labeled "EF 2." The receiving wallet now holds a total of 7,000 ETH, or about $22 million at today's market rate.
Internal transfers between foundation-controlled wallets are not unusual, but this move is intriguing given that Ethereum is back in the spotlight. The price is back above $3,150, and corporate ETH holdings are expanding big time.
This, of course, raises questions about the foundation's intentions for the next phase of adoption.
What is notable is not just the transfer but the environment around it. The foundation released its first strategic roadmap since 2021, detailing its plans to expand Ethereum into a global infrastructure layer.
The goals are reaching a billion users, accelerating corporate onboarding with new tools developed with Deloitte, and increasing funding for ZK-based technologies. So far in 2025, over $30 million have been distributed to ecosystem projects.
While public plans are expansive, the ETH movement suggests backend positioning is still in progress. With growing attention on wallet behavior, this shift raises speculation about upcoming deployments, grants or liquidity planning.
Inside job?
As this is happening, Ethereum’s ecosystem is changing from the outside. SharpLink, a public company with Ethereum co-founder Joe Lubin on its board, now has more ETH than the foundation itself: 280,600 ETH compared to 241,500. In total, 54 companies now control 1.6 million ETH, totaling close to $5 billion.
Routine transfers now seem like signals. The foundation's 1,000 ETH move might not lead to immediate action, but it shows that the engine room behind Ethereum's core is adjusting its assets as new players enter the scene.