BitMine Immersion Technologies, the public crypto treasury company chaired by Tom Lee, is facing mounting scrutiny after Ethereum’s latest downturn pushed the firm’s massive ETH position deep into unrealized loss territory.
With ether dropping to near $2,300, BitMine is now sitting on an estimated $6 billion paper loss, based on an average acquisition price close to $3,800 per ETH.
The drawdown comes amid a broader crypto market deleveraging event that has erased hundreds of billions in market capitalization and triggered large-scale liquidations across derivatives markets.
BitMine has quietly built one of the largest ETH treasuries ever held by a public entity.
While the scale of the loss is substantial, BitMine’s position differs structurally from the highly leveraged trades that were forcibly liquidated during recent market stress.
Unlike traders wiped out in January’s liquidation cascade, BitMine’s ETH is held directly on its balance sheet, not on margin. This shields the firm from the automatic liquidation mechanics that erased more than $2.5 billion in leveraged positions across crypto markets.
In addition, BitMine has partially offset price weakness through staking operations.
This income stream provides operational breathing room, allowing the company to withstand volatility without selling into weakness.
Despite the drawdown, BitMine has continued accumulating ETH, adding more than 40,000 ETH in the final week of January 2026. The move signals continued conviction rather than risk aversion.
Tom Lee has framed the early-2026 selloff as a necessary deleveraging phase, arguing that forced liquidations and capital destruction are prerequisites for a healthier recovery later in the cycle.
BitMine is also pressing ahead with its Made-in-America Validator Network (MAVAN), scheduled for commercial launch in Q1 2026. The initiative is designed to:
If successful, MAVAN could meaningfully increase yield generation and improve long-term capital efficiency.
While BitMine faces no immediate liquidation risk, critics point to a different concern: exit liquidity.
With over 4 million ETH under control, any future attempt to materially reduce exposure could overwhelm market depth, potentially pushing prices lower during a sell-down. The position’s sheer size turns liquidity itself into a strategic constraint.
BitMine’s Ethereum strategy has transformed from a high-conviction bet into one of the largest concentrated crypto treasury risks in the public market. The firm can survive volatility, generate yield, and avoid forced selling, but it cannot ignore price reality indefinitely.
For now, BitMine is enduring the drawdown. The real test will come when the market asks whether conviction can outlast scale.
The post BitMine Faces $6 Billion Unrealized Loss as Ethereum Slides Below Cost Basis appeared first on ETHNews.

