The post Bitmine buys 60,999 ether, boosting holdings to 4.6M tokens worth over $10B appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Bitmine Immersion Technologies just madeThe post Bitmine buys 60,999 ether, boosting holdings to 4.6M tokens worth over $10B appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Bitmine Immersion Technologies just made

Bitmine buys 60,999 ether, boosting holdings to 4.6M tokens worth over $10B

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Bitmine Immersion Technologies just made its biggest ether purchase of the year. The company scooped up 60,999 ETH last week, worth roughly $140 million at current prices, pushing its total holdings past the 4.59 million token mark.

That stash is now valued at more than $10 billion. To put that in perspective, Bitmine controls approximately 3.8% of all circulating Ethereum supply. One company, nearly four cents of every ether in existence.

The numbers behind the buy

The 60,999-token purchase was only marginally larger than the previous week’s 60,976 ETH haul. Bitmine has clearly found its rhythm — buying in steady, massive chunks regardless of market conditions.

The firm’s stock (ticker: BMNR) jumped nearly 9% in pre-market trading Monday as crypto staged a weekend rebound. ETH itself climbed 8.4% over the prior 24 hours, offering a brief reprieve for holders who’ve endured a brutal stretch.

Here’s the thing about Bitmine’s position, though: the company is sitting on an estimated $6.5 billion in unrealized losses, according to data from DropsTab. That’s not a typo. Billions, with a B.

The firm has been buying throughout the recent downturn, dollar-cost averaging into what amounts to a historically large position during a period of significant price weakness. Whether that looks brilliant or reckless depends entirely on where ETH goes from here.

Despite the massive ETH purchases, Bitmine maintained $1.2 billion in cash reserves. The company also increased its stake in Eightco (ORBS), a Worldcoin-focused treasury firm, signaling that its crypto ambitions extend beyond Ethereum alone.

The staking income play

Bitmine isn’t just hoarding tokens and hoping for price appreciation. The company has staked 3.04 million of its 4.59 million ETH, generating what it claims is approximately $180 million in annualized staking revenue.

That figure deserves some scrutiny. Standard Ethereum staking yields have hovered between 3.4% and 3.8% annually for much of the past two years. Bitmine’s claimed yield works out to roughly 5.9% — meaningfully higher than the network average.

In English: either Bitmine is accessing premium staking opportunities through MEV-boost rewards, liquid staking derivatives, or restaking protocols, or the math doesn’t quite add up. The company hasn’t provided a detailed breakdown of how it achieves that yield premium.

Still, even at standard staking rates, a position of 3.04 million staked ETH would generate north of $100 million annually. That’s real revenue from protocol participation, not speculation — and it’s the core of Bitmine’s argument for why an Ethereum treasury strategy makes sense even during drawdowns.

The broader staking landscape has grown substantially since Ethereum’s transition to proof-of-stake in September 2022. As of early 2024, over 24 million ETH was actively staked across validators, representing roughly 20% of total supply. Bitmine’s staked position alone accounts for a meaningful slice of that validator set.

Geopolitics and the crypto strength thesis

Bitmine chairman Tom Lee — the Fundstrat co-founder who has been one of crypto’s most prominent advocates since the mid-2010s — used the occasion to make a macro case for digital assets.

That’s a bold framing. Lee is essentially arguing that crypto has graduated from “risk-off sell everything” territory into the “growth asset” bucket that benefits when investors flee traditional value plays. The 2,450 basis point outperformance over the S&P 500 is striking if it holds up, though the timeframe is short enough to be noisy.

The argument carries echoes of the narrative that powered Bitcoin’s institutional adoption cycle. When MicroStrategy began its Bitcoin treasury strategy in 2020, skeptics called it a corporate gamble dressed up as innovation. Today, multiple companies have followed that playbook, and the strategy has become a recognized — if controversial — approach to corporate treasury management.

Bitmine appears to be running that same play with Ethereum, betting that ETH’s staking yield and smart contract utility give it a structural advantage over Bitcoin for treasury purposes. The staking income provides a cash flow narrative that Bitcoin simply cannot match, which makes the pitch to institutional investors somewhat easier.

What this means for investors

Bitmine’s strategy raises several questions that prospective investors need to wrestle with.

First, concentration risk. A company with $10 billion in ETH and $1.2 billion in cash is functionally a leveraged bet on Ethereum’s price. The $6.5 billion in unrealized losses demonstrates how quickly that exposure can become painful. If ETH drops another 20-30%, the balance sheet math gets ugly fast.

Second, the staking yield story needs verification. A 5.9% annualized return sounds attractive, but it’s substantially above market rates. Investors should demand transparency on how that yield is generated and what additional risks — smart contract risk, slashing risk, counterparty risk from liquid staking providers — come along for the ride.

Third, the competitive landscape is evolving. Bitmine bills itself as the largest ether-focused treasury firm, but institutional interest in Ethereum has grown considerably since the approval of spot ETH ETFs. Those products offer investors exposure to ETH’s price movements without the operational complexity and corporate governance risk of buying stock in a treasury company. Bitmine’s edge is the staking yield that ETFs currently don’t pass through, but that could change as regulators warm to staking within fund structures.

The geopolitical backdrop adds another layer of uncertainty. Lee’s argument that crypto benefits from growth concerns is historically inconsistent — during the 2022 downturn, crypto sold off harder than nearly every traditional asset class. The Iran conflict narrative may prove correct this time, but treating one data point as a regime change requires a leap of faith.

Watch Bitmine’s cash reserves closely. The $1.2 billion cushion looks comfortable today, but the company’s pace of ETH accumulation suggests it won’t stay that way forever. If the firm needs to tap equity markets or take on debt to continue buying, the cost of capital could become a drag on returns.

For the broader Ethereum ecosystem, Bitmine’s accumulation is a double-edged sword. Having 3.8% of circulating supply locked in a single corporate treasury reduces available supply, which can support price during bull markets. But it also creates a potential overhang — if Bitmine ever needs to liquidate a meaningful portion of its holdings, the sell pressure could be severe.

Bottom line: Bitmine is making the boldest corporate bet on Ethereum anyone has ever attempted, and the $6.5 billion in unrealized losses shows the cost of conviction. The staking revenue provides a real income floor that distinguishes this from pure speculation, but the concentration risk is enormous. This is either a visionary treasury strategy or the most expensive bag-hold in crypto history. Time, and ETH’s price, will tell.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Estefano Gomez. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Source: https://cryptobriefing.com/bitmine-buys-60999-ether-holdings/

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