Bitmine Immersion Technologies made its largest single-week Ethereum acquisition of the year, purchasing 60,999 ETH and pushing its total holdings to approximately 4.6 million ETH. The buy is not just a treasury move.
Chairman Tom Lee has built an explicit macro thesis around it, one that ties crypto accumulation directly to the Iran war and global economic instability.
Bitmine now holds 4,595,562 ETH, according to CoinDesk, representing roughly 3.81% of the total circulating Ethereum supply. To put that in perspective, only Strategy’s Bitcoin position comes close to that kind of market share concentration among publicly traded companies.
Of those holdings, 3.04 million ETH, about 66% of the total, is currently staked. That staking operation generates an estimated $180 million in annualized revenue, which means Bitmine is not simply sitting on a passive treasury position. It is running an active yield business on top of it. The firm’s total crypto and cash holdings, including strategic investments, are currently valued at approximately $11.5 billion.
One detail in the latest purchase stands out. Of the 60,999 ETH acquired this week, 5,000 came directly from the Ethereum Foundation. The Foundation sold those tokens to Bitmine rather than into the open market, a structure that avoids the price impact of a large institutional seller hitting exchanges. For the Foundation, it funds operations without disrupting spot markets. For Bitmine, it represents a direct relationship with the protocol’s core development organization.
The strategic framing comes from Lee directly. His argument runs as follows: rising oil prices and economic anxiety tied to the Iran conflict are pushing institutional capital toward assets that behave like growth stocks but sit outside traditional financial infrastructure. Cryptocurrencies, in his view, fit that profile.
Lee points to specific performance data to support the claim. Since the start of the conflict, he argues, cryptocurrencies have outperformed the S&P 500 by 2,450 basis points, with Ethereum leading that recovery among major assets. Whether that outperformance holds or represents a temporary flight-to-risk rotation is a question the data alone cannot answer, but the figure is notable if accurate.
Lee also frames the current market moment as the tail end of what he calls a “mini cryptocurrency winter,” drawing a parallel to the post-FTX period in late 2022. His expectation is a V-shaped recovery from current levels. That is an optimistic read, and it is worth noting it comes from the chairman of a firm that has just made its largest weekly ETH purchase of the year. The incentive to frame the market constructively is not neutral.
The ETH accumulation is only part of the picture. Alongside this week’s purchase, Bitmine invested an additional $75 million into Eightco, a company listed under the ticker ORBS that holds equity in OpenAI. That bet sits at the intersection of crypto treasury strategy and AI infrastructure exposure, a combination that a growing number of crypto-native firms have been gravitating toward in 2026.
Bitmine is also building out its own staking infrastructure. Plans are underway to launch the Made in America Validator Network, known internally as MAVAN, in the first quarter of 2026. The goal is to scale internal staking capacity rather than rely on third-party validators, which would reduce operational costs and increase the yield margin on its existing 3 million staked ETH position.
The broader picture here is a company that started as a mining operation and has systematically repositioned itself as an Ethereum treasury and staking business with a side bet on AI. Whether the macro thesis Lee is selling proves correct matters less in the short term than the structural reality: Bitmine now controls nearly 4% of all circulating ETH and is being paid $180 million a year to hold it.
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