The Ethereum Foundation (EF) has deployed 2,400 ETH and approximately $6 million in stablecoins into Morpho’s yield-bearing vaults, marking a significant move in its treasury diversification strategy. According to the Foundation, Morpho’s open-source infrastructure aligns with its “Defipunk” framework — emphasizing security, transparency, and decentralization in DeFi participation.
Morpho, known for its permissionless lending protocols, will manage the deposits through MetaMorpho and Morpho Vault v2, both governed under open-source GPL licenses. The integration demonstrates EF’s ongoing preference for transparent, auditable smart contracts over custodial or closed-source alternatives.
0/ Today, the Ethereum Foundation deposited 2400 ETH and ~$6M stablecoins into Morpho’s yield-bearing vaults.
— Ethereum Foundation (@ethereumfndn)
Morpho is a pioneer in permissionless DeFi protocols and consistently demonstrates a commitment to Free/Libre Open Source Software (FLOSS) principles.
Ethereum treasury policy reflects institutional maturity
In its latest treasury policy update, EF reaffirmed its long-term plan to maintain 2.5 years of operational reserves, equating to roughly 15% of total assets annually. The Foundation intends to gradually reduce its operational expenditures over the next five years to align with an endowment-style model.
The policy framework defines when ETH is sold or deployed onchain, ensuring liquidity while keeping most reserves in permissionless yield-bearing protocols.
Beyond returns, EF’s investments now serve a dual purpose: generating modest yield and reinforcing decentralized infrastructure across the Ethereum ecosystem.
Parallel effort to defend open-source development
The Ethereum Foundation’s deposit into Morpho follows its renewed focus on protecting open-source innovation through the recently launched legal defense fund for Tornado Cash developers. The fund, managed in collaboration with Keyring Network, supports developers Roman Storm and Alexey Pertsev as they face criminal prosecution for writing privacy-preserving code.
Both initiatives reflect the EF’s shift from technical stewardship to broader ecosystem governance, aligning its treasury strategy and legal efforts with open-source and DeFi principles.
Together, EF’s strategic deployment of capital and its support for privacy tool developers illustrate a broader principle: that decentralization requires both infrastructure and legal defense.

