EthSystems, founded by the former heads of the Ethereum Foundation's Institutional Privacy Task Force, launched publicly on July 14 with backing from Bitmine (NYSE: BMNR), Sharplink (Nasdaq: SBET), Joe Lubin, and other ecosystem participants. The engineering and research company builds privacy technology that allows banks, asset managers, and regulated institutions to execute financial transactions on Ethereum without exposing trade details or client identities.
The launch marks the third major spinout from the Ethereum Foundation in recent months. Earlier this month, Ethereum Institutional launched as an independent nonprofit focused on institutional engagement and market development. Ethlabs, also spun out from the foundation, advances Ethereum's core protocol. EthSystems sits at a more applied layer – translating institutional compliance and privacy requirements into production systems.
The company launches with a year of shipped, open-source work already public at ethsystems.org, covering private transfers, private bonds, confidential settlement, and privacy-preserving identity. The founding team – Mo Jalil, Oskar Thorén, and Aaryamann Challani – built these systems while leading the foundation's Institutional Privacy Task Force, working directly with central banks, regulators, and tier-one financial institutions.
The timing reflects broader momentum in institutional Ethereum adoption. Stablecoins and tokenized assets are already moving onto the network, but meaningful institutional scale requires infrastructure that meets institutional standards for privacy and security. Banks and asset managers cannot run operations in full view of the world, and most will not migrate settlement or collateral management onchain without assurance that commercially sensitive information stays private.
Joe Lubin, Ethereum's co-founder and Consensys CEO, said in a statement that the team understands the difference deeply between real privacy and permissioned systems with extra steps. He cited the team's discipline in publishing work publicly, which allows the ecosystem to build on it rather than waiting for a single vendor to release solutions.
Bitmine, which is building itself into an Ethereum treasury company through staking and DeFi, sees privacy infrastructure as foundational to the larger opportunity. Tom Lee, Bitmine's chairman, said that the next $100 trillion of assets won't migrate onchain without it.
The question now is which institutions will adopt EthSystems' technology, and at what pace. The company has relationships with central banks and regulators already, but converting research relationships into customer deployments takes time. The answer will shape whether Ethereum actually becomes the settlement layer for institutional finance, or remains primarily a retail and DeFi platform.