Chief executive Frederik Gregaard sets the tone in his foreword, arguing that “sharing not only our achievements but also how we allocate resources is fundamental to building trust and ensuring long-term success.” He notes that 2024 spending reached $29.2 million, of which $22.1 million went directly into the Foundation’s three strategic pillars—adoption, operational resilience and education—while $7.1 million covered legal, governance, finance and infrastructure overheads “essential to scaling our delivery and ensuring our work remains robust, accountable and future-proof.”
Transparency itself became a budget line: the Foundation has migrated its entire 2024 general ledger to Reeve, a bespoke reporting tool that anchors financial statements, treasury balances and expenditure records directly on Cardano. Reeve, the report explains, “records, verifies and shares financial data directly on the Cardano blockchain,” allowing stakeholders to audit immutable entries without relying on external gatekeepers.
That step, Gregaard says, “reaffirms our dedication to financial responsibility and strategic investment,” and signals an open invitation to the community to verify every figure. By combining on-chain disclosure with a narrative report that converts ADA and bitcoin balances into USD, the Foundation hopes to satisfy both technically minded auditors and mainstream readers.
With a war chest still dominated by native ADA—originally seeded by an endowment of 648 million ADA and 8,258 BTC—the Foundation faces no immediate liquidity pressures. Its delegation policy continues to funnel stake to mission-critical pools that contribute code or infrastructure, reinforcing a self-referential ecosystem in which staking rewards fund further development.
At press time, ADA traded at $0.7277.