Binance Labs invests in StakeStone as it continues to bet big on restaking sector

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Quick Take

  • Binance Labs has invested an undisclosed sum in StakeStone, a liquidity infrastructure startup that currently supports Ethereum restaking.

Binance Labs has invested an undisclosed sum in StakeStone — a liquidity infrastructure startup that also supports restaking — as it continues to bet big on the staking and restaking sectors.

StakeStone calls itself an "omnichain liquidity distribution network" capable of integrating various yield sources — including Ethereum staking, restaking, real-world assets, as well as artificial intelligence and decentralized physical infrastructure network assets — Charles K, co-founder of StakeStone, told The Block.

Singapore-based StakeStone currently supports Ethereum restaking on its platform. Users staking ether with StakeStone receive STONE, a "yield-bearing ETH" token, which can be further utilized for additional rewards, Charles said. StakeStone is also exploring opportunities within the Bitcoin restaking ecosystem to introduce "yield-bearing BTC (STONE BTC)," he added.

Charles noted that StakeStone is not merely a liquid restaking protocol, as restaking serves as one of the platform's underlying strategies, with plans to support bitcoin and other assets in the future.

In recent months, Binance Labs has increased its support for startups in the restaking space. This year, it invested in the Bitcoin staking protocol Babylon and Ethereum restaking protocols Renzo and Puffer Finance. Additionally, earlier this month, Binance Labs invested in seven more startups, including synthetic dollar protocol developer Ethena Labs and zkSync-based decentralized derivatives exchange Derivio.

Binance Labs, the $10 billion venture capital and incubation arm of crypto exchange Binance, quietly spun off from Binance earlier this year. Binance Labs staff contracts are now separate from employees of the crypto exchange, similar to the structure of the Binance-backed BNB Chain project, with few operational changes.

Last year, Binance Labs accepted its first external capital when it closed a $500 million fund. However, over the summer, it began returning undeployed capital to limited partners.


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© 2025 The Block. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

AUTHOR

Yogita Khatri is a senior reporter at The Block and the author of The Funding newsletter. As our longest-serving editorial member, Yogita has been instrumental in breaking numerous stories, exclusives and scoops. With over 3,000 articles to her name, Yogita is The Block's most-published and most-read author of all time. Before joining The Block, Yogita wrote for CoinDesk and The Economic Times. You can reach her at [email protected] or follow her latest updates on X at @Yogita_Khatri5.

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