The Zcash Foundation entered Q2 with a major regulatory overhang removed after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission closed its investigation without recommending enforcement action.
The inquiry began with an August 2023 subpoena and ended with no enforcement recommendation against the Foundation. The closure gives Zcash a cleaner regulatory backdrop at a time when privacy-focused crypto assets remain under heavier exchange, compliance and policy scrutiny than most large-cap networks.
The update also lands during a volatile period for ZEC. Zcash has regained attention as traders rotate back into privacy narratives, with recent market coverage around Barry Silbert’s Zcash comments keeping the asset in focus. Regulatory clarity does not remove every challenge facing privacy coins, but it reduces one of the largest known risks attached to the Foundation itself.
Zcash still sits in a complicated policy category. Its shielded transaction design gives users optional privacy through zero-knowledge proofs, while regulators and exchanges continue to treat privacy tools with extra caution. That split keeps ZEC’s long-term narrative tied to both financial privacy demand and compliance risk.
ECC Turmoil Did Not Stop Network Activity
The first quarter also brought internal disruption across the Zcash ecosystem. Governance disputes at Electric Coin Company led most of its development team to depart during the quarter, creating uncertainty around development continuity and project coordination.
The Zcash network continued producing blocks and settling transactions normally through the transition. User funds and privacy were not affected, and no single organization controlled the network’s operation. That continuity is important for a privacy-focused chain because confidence depends on more than price action. Users need blocks, transactions, wallets, infrastructure and shielded functionality to keep working even when major ecosystem contributors face internal change.
Zcash Foundation engineering work remained focused on Zebra, the Z3 stack, FROST tooling, zcashd deprecation and Network Upgrade 7 groundwork. Zebra 4.3.0 also patched two responsibly disclosed vulnerabilities, including a remote denial-of-service issue and a consensus logic error that could have allowed a malicious miner to trigger a chain split.
The Foundation also deployed new DNS seeders in the United States and Europe after ECC’s seeders stopped responding. Peer discovery continued without a major network interruption, giving the ecosystem a practical test of whether infrastructure could remain available during organizational stress.
Treasury Holds ZEC, BTC, USDC And Cash
The Foundation ended March 31 with about $36.7 million in total liquid assets and roughly $36.69 million in net liquid assets. The treasury included $12.1 million in cash, 506,556 USDC, 85,412 ZEC, 41.8 BTC and 12.02 ETH.
ZEC represented the largest crypto position at about $21.2 million at quarter-end prices, while BTC accounted for about $2.85 million. The treasury mix leaves the Foundation meaningfully exposed to ZEC price volatility, but the cash and USDC balance gives it a large liquid buffer for operating expenses.
Average monthly operating expenses were about $272,539 during Q1, with total quarterly spending at $817,618. Protocol and Zebra work accounted for the largest allocation at 50.4%, followed by management and general costs at 18.8%, community at 17.9%, FROST at 8.1%, and Shielded Aid Initiative spending at 4.8%.
The Q1 update gives Zcash three concrete markers heading into the rest of 2026: the SEC matter is closed without enforcement action, the network kept operating through ECC disruption, and the Foundation still holds a sizable liquid treasury. The next pressure points are development continuity after the ECC departures, NU7 implementation, Zebra adoption, DNS seeder reliability, and whether ZEC can hold investor interest beyond the latest privacy-coin rotation.




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