For years, institutional investors have looked at Ethereum staking from a distance — attracted by the yields, but held back by the operational complexity and locked liquidity. Anchorage Digital is now directly targeting that gap. The federally chartered crypto bank has integrated Lido, Ethereum’s largest liquid staking protocol, giving institutional clients a compliant, seamless path to ETH liquid staking without ever leaving its regulated custody environment.
The integration means institutional clients can now connect directly to Lido’s decentralized application from within Anchorage’s platform to mint wstETH by depositing Ether, or redeem it back into ETH — all under institutional-grade custody and compliance controls. No asset movement to external services required.
That frictionless access matters more than it might first appear. Traditional Ethereum staking has always come with strings attached: long unbonding periods, the operational burden of running validator infrastructure, and capital that sits idle while locked. Lido’s liquid staking model solves this by issuing wstETH in exchange for staked ETH, letting holders continue earning staking rewards while keeping a fully transferable token in hand. Now that token is accessible inside a regulated US banking environment for the first time at this scale.
Anchorage clients can mint and burn wstETH through the Lido dApp, all within Anchorage’s existing governance and custody framework. Clients retain full oversight of their positions without introducing new counterparties or fragmenting operational workflows — a critical point for compliance-driven allocators who can’t afford fragmented custody chains.
wstETH automatically accrues staking rewards from Ethereum’s proof-of-stake network while remaining fully liquid and transferable. That combination — yield plus liquidity — is exactly what institutional capital needs. It turns a staking position from a locked bet on Ethereum into a productive, flexible asset.
The Lido integration doesn’t stand alone. It slots into a broader strategy at Anchorage Digital to offer a complete suite of on-chain capabilities — staking, liquid staking, restaking, governance, and settlement — all under one regulated platform. The goal is to make advanced DeFi infrastructure genuinely institution-ready, rather than forcing large allocators to piece together services from multiple, unregulated providers.
This is where the strategic significance becomes clear. Institutions haven’t been absent from Ethereum staking because they lacked interest. They’ve been absent because the operational and compliance architecture wasn’t there. By consolidating these services under a federally chartered bank, Anchorage removes the friction that has historically kept large allocators on the sidelines.
The capital efficiency angle is arguably the most compelling part of this integration for professional allocators. wstETH can be used as collateral in lending markets, deployed on decentralized exchanges, or leveraged for cross-chain strategies — all without first unwinding a staking position. Sophisticated investors can generate yield from Ethereum staking while keeping those same assets productive across multiple DeFi protocols simultaneously.
That kind of composability was previously only accessible to crypto-native participants willing to manage self-custody and protocol risk directly. Packaging it inside a regulated custody environment changes the risk profile entirely for institutional compliance teams.
For Lido, the implications run in the other direction too. The protocol’s revenues fell over 20% in 2025 as users withdrew funds and staking yields declined, according to a March announcement from Lido. Gaining a direct institutional distribution channel through a major US-regulated bank could help reverse that trend by bringing in a segment of capital that wasn’t previously accessible to the protocol.
Anchorage Digital was founded in 2017 and is headquartered in San Francisco. It operates under a US federal banking charter and holds additional licenses in Singapore and New York, including a BitLicense — a combination that positions it as one of the most comprehensively licensed crypto custodians in the world.
The company’s investor base reflects that institutional credibility. Anchorage Digital is backed by Andreessen Horowitz, GIC, Goldman Sachs, KKR, and Visa, and carries an approximate valuation of $4.2 billion. Its global footprint includes offices in New York, Singapore, Portugal, and South Dakota.
Nathan McCauley, Co-Founder and CEO of Anchorage Digital, was direct about the significance of the move. “Liquid staking has become one of the most important building blocks for institutional participation in Ethereum,” he said. “By integrating with Lido, we’re giving institutions access to wstETH without the operational or security tradeoffs that have historically kept large allocators on the sidelines.”
Kean Gilbert, Head of Institutional Relations at the Lido Ecosystem Foundation, framed it from the protocol side: “Anchorage Digital’s integration brings wstETH into an important U.S. institutional platform and strengthens the role of stETH and the Lido protocol in institutional Ethereum staking.” The message from both sides is the same — institutional adoption of ETH liquid staking scales when access is built around how institutions actually operate, not around how DeFi protocols were originally designed.
The broader implication is that on-chain finance is maturing past the early-adopter phase. As regulated platforms increasingly bridge traditional institutional requirements with DeFi composability, the question shifts from whether institutions will participate in Ethereum staking to how large that participation becomes — and which platforms capture it.
Institutions can directly mint and redeem wrapped staked Ether (wstETH) within Anchorage’s regulated platform, accessing Ethereum staking rewards while maintaining full liquidity — without moving assets to external services.
wstETH accrues staking rewards on Ethereum’s proof-of-stake network while remaining liquid and transferable. It can be used as collateral in lending markets, deployed on decentralized exchanges, or applied to cross-chain strategies without unwinding a staking position.
Anchorage Digital operates under a US federal banking charter and holds a BitLicense in New York, alongside licenses in Singapore. This framework ensures institutional-grade custody and compliance controls for all on-chain services offered on the platform.
Liquid staking removes the core friction of traditional ETH staking — long unbonding periods, validator operational burdens, and idle capital — while improving capital efficiency. It allows institutions to earn staking yield while keeping assets productive and accessible, making Ethereum staking compatible with institutional operational and compliance requirements.
Article produced with the assistance of artificial intelligence and reviewed by the editorial team.

