Two addresses have processed over 45% of Ethereum (ETH) transactions since the blockchain network completed its transition to a proof-of-stake (PoS) consensus mechanism, according to Santiment data.

The market intelligence platform’s post-merge inflation dashboard showed that 46.15% of the “nodes for storing data, processing transactions, and adding new blockchain blocks can be attributed to just two addresses.”

 According to the data, the first address validated 188 blocks representing 28.97%, while the second validated 105 blocks representing 16.18% of the nodes. The third address validated 54 blocks representing 8.32%.

Santiment stated that the dominance of the two addresses responsible for over 45% of the validated blocks is “something to watch.”

Centralizations concerns

Members of the crypto community have begun to raise concerns about Ethereum’s decentralization based on Santiment’s data.

Meanwhile, a user criticized Santiment’s comments stating that the addresses are flashbot relays made up of thousands of validators using one relayer. Thus, it’s possible that these addresses are just relayer addresses and not sole validators.

Before the merge, several stakeholders in the industry repeatedly addressed centralization concerns within the space. Five entities control over 64% of staked Ethereum, and three of them are centralized exchanges. The decentralized staking platform, Lido (LDO) DAO alone, controls 31%.

The wallets belong to Coinbase and Lido

In a separate tweet, Gnosis co-founder Martin Köppelmann revealed that the two wallets belonged to Lido and Coinbase.

Köppelmann further tweeted that the top 7 entities control two-thirds of the stake.

 

Should the industry be concerned?

Nodes play an integral role in Ethereum’s staking mechanism as they pledge tokens to get a chance to produce the next transaction blocks.

Though the dominance of the two wallets during the early hours of the merge goes against Ethereum’s decentralization aim, it is not enough to conclude that the PoS network is centralized.

Meanwhile, the merge’s enthusiasm has not translated into a positive price performance for Ethereum. The asset’s value has tanked below the $1500 level after roughly $70 million in long positions were liquidated, according to Coinglass data.

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