Odaily สัมภาษณ์ SharpLink: "นายทุนผู้ผลิต" ของ Ethereum
- มุมมองหลัก: SharpLink บริษัทที่จดทะเบียนในตลาด NASDAQ ได้จัดสรรสินทรัพย์ในงบดุลเกือบทั้งหมดเป็น Ethereum และผ่านกลยุทธ์การเดิมพันแบบเนทีฟ (native staking) และความร่วมมือบนบล็อกเชนที่สร้างสรรค์และเป็นไปตามกฎระเบียบ ตั้งเป้าที่จะเป็น "วิธีที่ดีที่สุดในการถือครอง Ethereum" โดยตัวชี้วัดประสิทธิภาพหลัก (KPI) คือการเพิ่มจำนวน ETH ต่อหุ้นให้สูงสุด และเชื่อว่า Ethereum ถูกประเมินค่าต่ำเกินไปเนื่องจากแนวโน้มต่างๆ เช่น RWA (สินทรัพย์ในโลกแห่งความจริง)
- องค์ประกอบสำคัญ:
- กลยุทธ์หลักและการกำหนดตำแหน่ง: SharpLink เป็นคลังสินทรัพย์ดิจิทัล กลยุทธ์หลักคือ "ETH เป็นหลัก" โดยจัดสรรเงินทุนประมาณ 3 พันล้านดอลลาร์เกือบทั้งหมดให้กับ ETH ตัวชี้วัดประสิทธิภาพหลัก (KPI) คือการเพิ่มจำนวน ETH ต่อหุ้นให้สูงสุด ไม่ใช่เพียงแค่แสวงหาผลกำไรเป็นดอลลาร์
- แหล่งที่มาของรายได้: รับรายได้ประมาณ 1 ล้านดอลลาร์ต่อวันผ่านการเดิมพันแบบเนทีฟ (native staking) และร่วมมือกับ Linea, ether.fi เป็นต้น ในการปรับใช้บนบล็อกเชนเป็นระยะเวลาสองปี เพื่อรับผลตอบแทน ETH ที่เกินอัตราการเดิมพันแบบเนทีฟ
- นวัตกรรมด้านความสอดคล้องตามกฎระเบียบและความปลอดภัย: ผ่านความร่วมมือกับ Anchorage Digital ผู้ให้บริการดูแลรักษาที่ได้รับอนุญาตจาก OCC เป็นครั้งแรกที่สามารถดำเนินการทางการเงินบนบล็อกเชนได้โดยไม่ต้องออกจากระบบดูแลรักษาที่เป็นไปตามกฎระเบียบ ตั้งเป้าที่จะเป็นต้นแบบที่ "ปลอดภัยเป็นอันดับแรก" และเป็นไปตามกฎระเบียบสำหรับสถาบันในการมีส่วนร่วมกับ DeFi
- มุมมองและโอกาสของตลาด: เชื่อว่า Ethereum ถูกประเมินค่าต่ำเกินไป โอกาสหลักอยู่ที่ตลาดระยะเริ่มต้นขนาดใหญ่ของการแปลงเป็นโทเค็นของ RWA (สินทรัพย์ในโลกแห่งความจริง) โดย Ethereum จะอยู่ที่ศูนย์กลางของการเปลี่ยนแปลงนี้
- ความเสี่ยงและการสื่อสารกับนักลงทุน: บริษัทไม่มีหนี้สินและความเสี่ยงจากการชำระบัญชี แต่มีขาดทุนทางบัญชีที่ไม่เกิดขึ้นจริง ผ่านการศึกษาตลาดอย่างต่อเนื่อง สัดส่วนการถือหุ้นของสถาบันได้เพิ่มขึ้นอย่างมีนัยสำคัญจากประมาณ 6% เป็น 46%
Original|Odaily (@OdailyChina)
Author|Hao Fangzhou
On-site Interview|Cody
"E Guards," are you still there?
Amid the current widespread pessimism, I heard a statement—"ETH that is not staked has no productivity"—hold on, first get to know the person who said this:
Matt Sheffield (X @sheffieldreport), CIO (Chief Investment Officer) of SharpLink.
Recently, SharpLink, which positions itself as a "next-generation digital asset treasury," publicly announced that it has deployed $200 million worth of ETH directly on-chain through the qualified custodian Anchorage Digital, entering into a two-year yield enhancement collaboration with Linea, ether.fi, and EigenCloud. This move not only aims to earn ETH yields exceeding native staking but also intends to establish a compliant model for institutional-grade DeFi operations. Its core logic is very clear: with the firm belief that Ethereum is severely undervalued at present, the company is maximizing the amount of ETH per share at its own appropriate pace.
Why does this publicly listed company dare to almost fully bet its balance sheet on ETH? Are the bullish statements purely due to their own positions, or do they, standing at a high vantage point, see a different future? How do large institutions and regulators trust on-chain excess returns? Faced with paper losses amounting to billions of dollars, how do they convince traditional investors?
In New York, Odaily had the privilege of meeting Matt for an in-depth conversation, seeking answers to the above questions.
He clearly explained to us SharpLink's "ETH-centric" philosophy, the steady strategy with "maximizing ETH per share" as the core KPI, and how they, through native staking, on-chain collaborations, and pioneering compliance practices, attempt to become "the best way to hold Ethereum" and pioneer a secure path for the entire industry from compliant custody to DeFi yields.
Below is the fully edited interview transcript, enjoy~

Odaily: Hello, Matt. I'm Cody from Odaily. It's a great honor to visit the SharpLink team in Midtown Manhattan today. Could Matt please briefly introduce yourself?
Matt: I am the Chief Investment Officer of SharpLink, which is a Nasdaq-listed digital asset treasury with approximately $3 billion in equity capital. Our goal is to deploy this capital on our balance sheet in the most efficient way to hold Ethereum and demonstrate a "safety-first" philosophy to the world.
Odaily: What previous experience and resource advantages can you leverage since joining SharpLink?
Matt: I come from a traditional finance background. I initially worked at Bridgewater Associates, trading interest rate and credit products. Then, in 2022, I started my own venture, co-founding a crypto hedge fund with several former colleagues.
More recently, I led the spot trading team at FalconX, one of the world's largest digital asset prime brokers and trading desks. It was at FalconX that I developed an interest in the digital asset treasury space and connected with the SharpLink team. My career has consistently focused on native yield and the "productivity" of assets.
Odaily: After joining SharpLink, what is the core KPI for you as CIO?
Matt: It is to maximize ETH per share. My work in this role is to build what we consider to be the efficient frontier portfolio for SharpLink, denominated in ETH, that generates higher risk-adjusted ETH returns.
For example: We started by natively staking all our ETH to demonstrate to the market that Ethereum is a fundamentally different asset. It is "productive," and in the right hands, it can become even more productive. An ETF that does not stake has no productivity and does not fully utilize all the value Ethereum can create.
Odaily: Does the company prioritize maximizing dollar profits or maximizing ETH per share?
Matt: Actually, we believe these two are essentially the same thing. Because our core belief is: Ethereum is an undervalued opportunity with tremendous upside potential, stemming from the growth curves we see in areas like tokenization, smart payments, and more. Therefore, SharpLink made a strategic decision starting last June—to allocate almost our entire treasury to Ethereum. This is also what we believe is the best decision for our shareholders.
Given that Ethereum is undervalued and we want to accumulate as much ETH per share as possible as a driver of shareholder growth, that ultimately equates to creating the highest dollar value over time.
Odaily: This question also touches on SharpLink's positioning. Publicly listed company, Digital Asset Treasury Company, active fund in the Ethereum ecosystem—which description is more accurate?
Matt: We are a digital asset treasury—that's the commonly used industry term—but I'd say we are a completely different treasury because we focus more on Ethereum's native productivity rather than financialized yield.
Odaily: Please elaborate on the part about focusing on native productivity, which is different from other treasuries?
Matt: People's understanding of digital asset treasuries originally came only from Michael Saylor's Strategy. Buying digital gold (BTC) is a fundamentally different asset choice, belonging to the structural type of financialized yield—adding leverage to common stock, introducing variable Gamma (the acceleration of option price changes)—using financialization methods to generate equity returns that do not exist in Bitcoin-denominated trading.
But we are trying to cater to a completely different set of participants interested in linearly accumulating yield. We currently earn about $1 million per day just from staking, and we currently have no debt.
Odaily: Does this mean the external concern that "during high volatility or price declines, the treasury needs to sell assets to alleviate cash flow pressure" is unlikely to happen at SharpLink? More specifically, at what ETH price point would trigger your "liquidation"?
Matt: We indeed do not have a liquidation price like those treasuries with convertible bonds, preferred shares, etc., where those instruments constantly face decay, or if they engage in some form of over-collateralized borrowing, liquidation might occur.
This also goes back to why we believe "Ethereum can be so powerful on the balance sheet": you have recurring income from staking, which helps protect the network, and you can generate excess income through more productive on-chain activities.
Odaily: Besides staking, which on-chain operations generate excess income?
Matt: SharpLink will engage in multi-year deployments with DeFi partners to earn additional ETH beyond the native staking rate. The ETH we earn now already exceeds the native staking rate. We have taken on slightly more risk and pushed the business boundary outward a bit.
Our goal is, if the Ethereum native staking rate is considered the risk-free rate in the crypto space, then it should be our benchmark, and we should strive to exceed it on a risk-adjusted basis. That's the focus of my work.
Not only establishing partnerships on-chain, SharpLink is also looking for external partners, exploring ways to achieve this goal both on-chain and off-chain. Ultimately, holding a large amount of Ethereum will have parallel dual benefits—creating excess value for shareholders and being beneficial to the Ethereum ecosystem.
Odaily: Besides continuing to accumulate ETH, does SharpLink have plans for more active participation in RWA, the Ethereum ecosystem, etc., this year? Or will it maintain a relatively passive treasury management role?
Matt: I don't consider this passive; we are actively managing the Ethereum treasury. It's just that currently, we have no interest in diluting the value proposition.
Although we are very interested in helping with RWA liquidity, yield-generating strategies, smart payments, etc., such as providing liquidity to protocols to generate more ETH per share. But these are not core businesses; SharpLink's goals are very focused.
Odaily: In January this year, SharpLink announced it had deployed $170 million worth of ETH on Linea to enhance staking yields. How do you assess liquidity risk and on-chain risk? What is the acceptance level among institutional investors for this?
Matt: The news you mentioned is a very interesting transaction not only for us but for the entire industry. Because historically, institutions do not go on-chain. I think this time they are making compromises on crucial risk values to achieve a greater trade-off. Behind this is partly a market structure issue and partly an incentive issue. Previously, institutions participating in DeFi were not large enough to invest the time and resources to reduce transaction risks.
To this end, we collaborated with Linea, ether.fi, and EigenCloud on a two-year deployment. By the way, updating the number, it's now $200 million; we added another $30 million after the initial announcement.
We not only earn on-chain liquidity and interest rates, but our partners also provide a long-term nature that is basically non-existent in the crypto space currently, and give us Ethereum-denominated incentives.
We want to establish institutional-grade partnerships and maintain institutional-grade durations, which is important.
Another partner, Anchorage Digital, is an OCC-chartered compliant custodian. We hope to achieve financial operations for the first time without leaving a qualified custodian. We don't want to use hot wallets, so we mint assets from within the custodian and then bridge cross-chain via LayerZero. Probably no other publicly listed company has done this before.
This is setting a "safety-first" example, both raising standards and paving the way, making it easier and more trustworthy for later entrants to access DeFi.
Odaily: As a Nasdaq-listed company, the SEC has very strict accounting treatment for crypto assets (such as fair value measurement). How do you ensure that complex DeFi yield strategies (like LST, LRT) comply with the compliance requirements of a listed company?
Matt: Interestingly, we are always "eating the crab." When SharpLink started native staking, we saw this—native staking flows into revenue, while liquid staking tokens are currently treated as intangible assets and subject to impairment—the market must understand our financial statements.
Whenever we do something, we communicate extensively with large internal and external teams to ensure compliance. We pioneer compliant precedents so others can follow, giving Wall Street and investors confidence, and the entire industry can develop accordingly. This is a very time-consuming process, which is why we proceed methodically.
We have been implementing a digital asset strategy for less than a year, with assets under management of approximately $30 billion. This accumulation rate may not sound astonishing, but it is already an appropriate balance point.
Odaily: What frustrates ETH holders is that compared to BTC and other mainstream coins, ETH's current performance is poor. What's your take on this?
Matt: The major bullish factors for ETH are only just beginning to be noticed. I think the most important one is RWA. When looking at market size and data charts, you need to look at "how much of the digital assets are tokenized, compared to the scale of the entire financial world." For example, BlackRock intends to tokenize everything. Just one of their ETF series has $4.5 trillion. This is several times the total current market capitalization of RWA.
So we are still in the super early stages of a massive transformation of assets moving on-chain. Ethereum will be at the center of this transformation. This is the opportunity we see for Ethereum—substantial network growth, harboring price appreciation potential.
Over the past month or so, the market foundation has become more solid and healthy, especially during US trading hours, with trading behavior becoming more rational. Tailwinds include US regulatory clarity, ETFs, etc.
We try to avoid predicting prices because, ultimately, everyone must evaluate for themselves whether the Ethereum opportunity is right for them. But we absolutely hope SharpLink is the best way to hold Ethereum.
Odaily: ETH's price weakness has also brought huge paper net losses to SharpLink. How do you explain this financial performance of "high growth accompanied by large losses" to traditional shareholders?
Matt: That's a great question. We do a lot of investor communication and education, trying to accurately explain to the market what SharpLink's strategy is. This way, you know exactly what you are investing in, rather than putting money into a black box.
The result of market education is: when we filed the 13F last June, institutional ownership was 5-6%, with the rest being retail; the recently released 13F shows our institutional ownership has now reached 46%, with many institutions on the list that previously had not invested much in the digital asset space.
This is also why I keep attending meetings, giving interviews, explaining the strategy, and conveying the idea—if you are interested in going long on Ethereum, we want to be the best way to achieve that in a public, regulated vehicle. If you are not interested in going long on Ethereum, I also hope people understand that SharpLink is not the right stock for them.
Odaily: Have you had any cooperation with the Asian market before?
Matt: Yes, I have traded in and spent time in the Asian market myself. The growth potential in Asia is huge, especially for digital assets. When I attended the Consensus conference in Hong Kong in February, I was pleasantly surprised by the surge in attention. We also went to South Korea, Japan, and recently to the Gulf region, meeting with large institutions and sovereign funds, discussing the opportunities for Ethereum, the opportunities for SharpLink, and what kind of ecosystem they are trying to build locally.
I saw great interest in RWA in Hong Kong and the Gulf region. The regulators are incredibly cooperative and visionary; they are trying to figure out how we can do this safely, how to advance so they can be seen as innovation hubs; local builders also see it as home.
We want to be where early protocols are, acting as a bridge between traditional finance and cryptocurrency.
Odaily: Besides Ethereum, where are SharpLink's points of interest?
Matt: In the entire on-chain ecosystem surrounding it. RWA, smart payments... are all within the scope we are willing to participate in. However, venture capital and liquidity funds seek high-risk, high-return investment opportunities; ETFs are buy-and-hold, not necessarily making assets productive; while Sharp


