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November 26, 2025

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The post Vitalik Buterin Charts ‘Targeted Growth’ as Ethereum Hits 60M Gas Limit Milestone appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News

Ethereum just crossed a major milestone and Vitalik Buterin is already pointing to the next one. 

After months of steady pressure from the community, the network is now running with a 60 million block gas limit, a full 2× jump in just one year. 

This shows up clearly in validator signaling, where support for 60M blocks has climbed fast and now sits neck-and-neck with the older ≤45M range.

Ethereum Hits 60M

The chart shared alongside the announcement shows exactly how quickly sentiment has changed.

It’s the clearest sign that the network is ready to handle more activity per block.

A member from the Ethereum Foundation summed it up: “Just a year after the community started pushing for higher gas limits, Ethereum is now running with a 60M block gas limit.”

Vitalik’s Message: More Growth, But With Guardrails

Vitalik Buterin jumped in with his own response. He’s preparing the community for a different kind of expansion next year.

“Expect continued growth but more targeted / less uniform growth for next year,” he wrote.

In plain terms: the gas limit may rise again, potentially by 5×, but some operations will also get 5× more expensive. This isn’t to punish developers. It’s to keep the network safe as it scales.

Vitalik even listed the operations he thinks should cost more.

Why It Matters

Ethereum is moving into a phase where higher capacity alone isn’t enough. More block space helps, but raising limits blindly risks congestion, slower block propagation, and heavier requirements for home validators. 

That’s why developers have spent the past year running benchmarking tools, coordinating clients, and testing how nodes behave under heavier loads.

Vitalik’s approach keeps the door open for more throughput while protecting the network from bloat and instability. Contracts that waste storage or run heavy computation will finally feel the cost of it.

The Road Ahead

If Ethereum follows this model, users should see smoother performance during high-demand periods, while developers will need to write cleaner, more efficient code. Validators, meanwhile, must stay updated as gas limits continue to climb.

Ethereum is tuning itself for long-term durability. And if Vitalik’s comments are any indication, the shift to smarter, more intentional growth has only just begun.

Nvidia stock (NASDAQ: NVDA) rose 2.5% on Wednesday, a modest uptick that has some traders asking a bigger question: has the next major Wall Street positioning already started?

The move comes at a delicate time for the chipmaker, following a turbulent stretch that saw shares drop 14% since the start of the month.

This isn’t just about a single day’s green candle. Investors are parsing whether the bounce marks a technical relief rally or the beginning of renewed institutional buying ahead of catalysts like fresh demand data and product updates.​

The significance of even small moves in Nvidia can’t be overstated: the stock remains central to the AI trade, and any shift in sentiment ripples through technology ETFs, peer stocks, and even global indices.

This report breaks down what drove the day’s action, what analysts are saying, and what it means for the broader market.

Nvidia stock: What triggered Wednesday’s move?

No single headline drove the bounce.

Instead, traders point to a combination of factors: the stock had become technically oversold after shedding over $700 billion in market value this month, and the broader market rally, with the S&P 500 posting its strongest three-day run since May, lifted sentiment across tech names.

Trading volume remained elevated, with around 317-320 million shares changing hands on November 25 alone, well above Nvidia’s 30-day average.

Options activity leaned bullish: on the prior session, call options accounted for nearly 62% of total NVDA options volume, suggesting directional conviction among traders betting on a rebound.​

Some investors also saw value at current levels. The stock’s forward P/E had dropped to 25 times projected earnings, down from 34 earlier this month.

Adam Sarhan, CEO of 50 Park Investments, noted that Nvidia’s growth remains robust enough that we have no qualms regarding its classification as a growth stock.

Still, concerns persist: reports that Meta is in talks to use Alphabet’s AI chips have rattled confidence in Nvidia’s near-monopoly on data-centre GPUs.​

Analyst reaction: Bulls vs. cautious voices

Wall Street remains overwhelmingly bullish. Of the 39 analysts covering Nvidia, the consensus rating is “Strong Buy,” with an average price target of $248.26, implying nearly 40% upside from current levels.

Following the company’s recent earnings beat, several major firms raised targets: Citigroup lifted its price target to $270, Barclays moved to $275, and JP Morgan raised its target to $250.​

The contrast is stark: bulls see the dip as a buying opportunity, while sceptics warn that Nvidia’s premium valuation depends on maintaining its market share against rising competition from Alphabet and Broadcom.​

Today’s move may be small in dollars but big in signal, traders are re-testing whether Nvidia remains the AI market’s barometer.

Options flows suggest institutional players haven’t abandoned ship: the put/call ratio sits at 0.89, indicating a tilt toward bullish positioning.

ETFs with heavy Nvidia exposure, including the SPDR S&P 500 ETF  and Invesco QQQ Trust , tracked the stock closely.

The post Nvidia stock soars 2.5% today: is Wall Street positioning for something bigger? appeared first on Invezz