Bitmine Immersion Technologies (BMNR) disclosed that it acquired 40,613 ETH during last week’s sharp market sell-off, deploying roughly $82 million as Ethereum briefly collapsed from above $2,300 to lows near $1,700 before stabilising.
The purchase further cements Bitmine Immersion Technologies as the world’s largest publicly traded holder of Ethereum and signals continued conviction in a recovery narrative despite deep drawdowns across the market.
The acquisition was executed during one of Ethereum’s most volatile weeks in years. Executive Chairman Tom Lee framed the move as a textbook “buy-the-dip” execution, arguing that the recent collapse reflects sentiment stress rather than structural weakness.
Lee continues to push a V-shaped recovery thesis, even with Ethereum trading roughly 62% below its 2025 peak. He points to on-chain activity as the core disconnect, highlighting daily transaction counts near 2.5 million and active addresses hovering around one million, levels he argues are inconsistent with a prolonged bear-market valuation.
Following the latest purchase, Bitmine’s total asset base is estimated at $10 billion. Ethereum dominates the balance sheet, with 4.33 million ETH valued at roughly $9.2 billion based on prices near $2,125. The company also holds a smaller Bitcoin position, substantial cash reserves, and strategic equity stakes across industrial and technology-linked businesses.
This treasury structure positions Bitmine less as a traditional crypto miner and more as a hybrid digital asset holding company with long-duration exposure to Ethereum’s ecosystem.
Bitmine is increasingly focused on monetising its ETH position rather than simply warehousing it. Approximately 67% of its Ethereum holdings, around 2.9 million tokens, are already staked, generating an estimated $202 million in annualised revenue.
The company plans to expand this strategy further with the launch of its own Made in America Validator Network (MAVAN) in the first quarter of 2026. The initiative is designed to optimise staking efficiency, reduce reliance on third-party infrastructure, and reinforce Bitmine’s long-term ambition to control up to 5% of Ethereum’s circulating supply.
Despite the scale of its holdings, Bitmine is currently sitting on significant unrealised losses. The firm’s average Ethereum acquisition cost stands near $3,826, implying paper losses of roughly $7.8 billion at current prices. However, the balance sheet remains debt-free, supported by nearly $600 million in cash and backing from institutional investors including ARK Invest and Founders Fund.
For now, Bitmine appears willing to tolerate short-term valuation pain in exchange for long-term strategic positioning. The latest ETH purchase underscores that the company views the recent crash not as a warning signal, but as an opportunity to reinforce its dominance in Ethereum’s institutional ownership landscape.
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