Deloitte has acquired the team behind Ethereum infrastructure company Blocknative, marking the end of the blockchain firm’s independent operations after nearly eight years building transaction monitoring and mempool infrastructure for the crypto industry.
The transition was announced by Blocknative founder and CEO Matt Cutler, who confirmed that the company’s API services and Gas Network platform will cease operations on June 19, 2026. Financial terms of the acquisition were undisclosed, and neither company specified how many employees are joining Deloitte.
News to share: Blocknative team has joined Deloitte.
This next chapter allows our team to take our work into a broader context, supporting enterprise and institutional adoption of blockchain in the age of AI and agentic workflows. Read on for detail. pic.twitter.com/ifZKsLTZPn
— Blocknative | ⛽ (@blocknative) May 19, 2026
Blocknative to Shut Down Core Infrastructure Services
Founded in 2018, Blocknative developed infrastructure tools focused on Ethereum transaction visibility, gas fee estimation, transaction simulation and mempool monitoring. Its products became widely used during the rise of decentralized finance and NFT trading, helping wallets, exchanges and decentralized applications manage pending blockchain transactions before final settlement.
The company later expanded into MEV-related infrastructure and launched Gas Network, a decentralized oracle platform designed to deliver real-time gas pricing data across blockchain ecosystems.
According to the company’s announcement, all Blocknative APIs will remain operational through June 19 before permanently shutting down. Gas Network will also cease operations on the same date because it relies on Blocknative’s backend infrastructure.
The shutdown will require developers and blockchain projects currently using the services to migrate toward alternative providers offering transaction monitoring and gas optimization infrastructure.
Deloitte Expands Blockchain and AI Infrastructure Capabilities
Blocknative said its engineering and research team will now operate within Deloitte’s enterprise technology and blockchain division, focusing on cryptographic systems, blockchain infrastructure and AI-related verification tools.
The acquisition comes as consulting firms increasingly position blockchain technology as part of broader enterprise AI infrastructure. Large organizations deploying autonomous AI systems and automated financial workflows are expected to require stronger systems for coordination, verification, auditability and digital trust.
Deloitte has expanded its blockchain advisory and digital asset operations in recent years, joining firms such as EY and PwC in building enterprise-focused crypto and tokenization services.
Industry analysts have increasingly pointed to blockchain-based verification systems as a potential infrastructure layer for AI governance, Agentic AI infrastructure and automated enterprise workflows.
Crypto Infrastructure Sector Faces Consolidation Pressure
The Blocknative acquisition reflects a broader consolidation trend across the crypto infrastructure market, where several middleware providers and blockchain tooling projects have reduced operations, merged with larger firms or shut down entirely amid tighter venture funding conditions.
The shift has also become visible across recent web3 fundraising updates, where investors have increasingly prioritized regulated digital asset infrastructure, tokenization platforms, AI-integrated blockchain systems and stablecoin settlement networks over standalone middleware providers.
Many infrastructure startups that expanded rapidly during the 2020–2022 crypto market cycle have faced slowing growth as institutional demand shifted toward regulated digital asset infrastructure, tokenization platforms and stablecoin settlement systems.
Blocknative was considered one of the more established Ethereum infrastructure providers, particularly in areas tied to mempool visibility, transaction orchestration, private order flow and MEV-related tooling.
While the Blocknative brand and standalone services are being retired, Deloitte’s acquisition of the engineering team signals continued institutional interest in blockchain infrastructure, especially where cryptographic systems may support enterprise AI deployment and automated transaction coordination.








