One company now holds close to 5% of all the ether that exists, and most of it is staked and off the market. The bull case is a supply squeeze. The bear case is a single buyer propping up a price it is already underwater on. Both can be true at the same time.
- BitMine now holds roughly 4.7% of Ethereum’s total supply.
- Most of its ETH is staked, shrinking the liquid float.
- The bull case is a treasury-driven supply squeeze.
- The bear case is that one buyer has become the market’s support.
On June 22, 2026, BitMine Immersion Technologies disclosed that it held 5,672,956 ether, worth about $10 billion, alongside a pile of cash, a sliver of Bitcoin, and stakes in a couple of moonshot bets. That ether position equals roughly 4.7% of the entire supply of the second-largest cryptocurrency.
The company has said out loud, repeatedly, that it intends to own 5% of all the ether that will ever exist. It calls the goal the “alchemy of 5%,” and it is now about 94% of the way there.
No single entity has ever set out to corner a meaningful slice of a major blockchain’s native asset as a stated corporate strategy. BitMine is doing exactly that, in public, one weekly purchase at a time.
The question its accumulation forces is no longer hypothetical: what happens to ether if a treasury company actually succeeds in taking a fixed, large share of the supply off the market?
This piece walks through the BitMine bet from both sides, because the honest answer is that it is genuinely double-edged. It covers how a Bitcoin miner became Ethereum’s largest holder, the supply-squeeze bull case that has true mechanics behind it, the bear case that one analyst reduced to a single devastating question, the reflexivity that makes the whole structure both powerful and fragile, what staking does to the math, and what all of it means for the price of ether.
The goal is not a verdict but a clear map of a strategy that is testing, in real time, whether a corporation can bend a token’s supply to its will, and whether doing so is brilliant or dangerous.
The number that should make you look twice
Start with the raw scale, because it is easy to skim past and hard to believe once it lands. BitMine holds more than 5.6 million ether out of a total supply of roughly 120.7 million coins.
That is not a rounding error or a speculative toe in the water. It is a position large enough that the company is, by its own accounting, the single largest holder of ether on the planet and the second-largest crypto treasury of any kind anywhere, behind only Michael Saylor’s Strategy and its 846,000 Bitcoin.
BitMine’s combined holdings of ether, Bitcoin, cash, and strategic stakes total about $10.7 billion.
The target sharpens the picture. 5% of ether’s supply is roughly 6 million coins, and BitMine sits within a few hundred thousand of it.
The company has slowed its buying as it approaches the line, acquiring tens of thousands of ether a week rather than the hundred-thousand-plus it was hoovering up earlier in the year, but the direction has not changed. Chairman Tom Lee, the Fundstrat founder who has become the public face of the strategy, keeps repeating that BitMine expects to reach 5% sometime in 2026.
When a corporation states that it intends to own a twentieth of an entire monetary network, and then methodically buys toward that number while the world watches its wallet on Arkham, the usual frame of “investor buys asset” stops being adequate.
This is something closer to an attempt to acquire a structural position in the asset itself.
How a Bitcoin miner became Ethereum’s largest holder
BitMine did not start here. It began as a Bitcoin mining operation, a business of running machines to earn block rewards, before it pivoted hard into an ether treasury model funded by a $250 million private placement in June 2025.
The shift mirrored the playbook Strategy wrote for Bitcoin: become a publicly traded company whose primary purpose is to hold a single crypto asset, so that stock-market investors who cannot or will not buy the token directly can get exposure through equity instead. That is corporate crypto treasuries explained in its simplest form.
What separates BitMine from a passive holder is the machinery it built around the position. The company stakes the vast majority of its ether, more than 4.7 million coins, roughly 83% of its holdings, through a proprietary platform it calls MAVAN, the Made in America Validator Network.
Staking locks the ether up to help secure the Ethereum network and earns a yield, currently around 2.7% to 2.8% annualized. BitMine projects that could generate well over $200 million a year in staking revenue as the position is fully deployed.
That cash flow is central to Lee’s pitch, because it lets him argue that BitMine is not merely a leveraged bet on ether’s price but a business with recurring income. To fund the buying, the company has reached beyond common stock into financial engineering, issuing a 9.5% perpetual preferred stock that trades under the ticker BMNP and pays weekly cash dividends, with the staking income pitched as the thing that covers those payments.
That makes BitMine part treasury company, part validator operator, and part income-product machine. It is also why the staking that locks up BitMine’s ether matters so much to the thesis.
The backers reading off the cap table are a roster of crypto-friendly capital: Cathie Wood’s ARK, Founders Fund, Pantera, Kraken, Galaxy Digital, and DCG among them. BitMine is not a fringe balance-sheet experiment anymore.
It is one of the clearest tests of whether the Saylor-style treasury model can be rebuilt around Ethereum.
The bull case: a supply squeeze hiding in plain sight
The optimistic reading has real mechanics behind it, not just hope. The argument runs like this: every ether BitMine buys and stakes is an ether removed from the tradeable float, the pool of coins actually available to buy and sell on the open market.
With more than 4.5 million coins staked and locked, BitMine has taken a meaningful chunk of ether out of circulation and parked it. It shows no intention of selling.
If you combine that with the ether held by exchange-traded funds, by other treasury companies, and by long-term holders who never move their coins, the supply actually available to meet new demand shrinks. A thinner float changes how price reacts when buyers return.
Basic economics does the rest of the work in this story. If demand for ether rises, from tokenization settling on Ethereum, from the spread of automated AI systems that Lee argues will need a neutral public blockchain, or from new ETF inflows, and the available supply has been deliberately constricted by large holders sitting on staked positions, then the price has to move more to clear the market.
A smaller free float means each new buyer pushes the price further, because there is less coin to go around. In the cleanest version of the bull case, BitMine and its fellow accumulators are quietly building a supply squeeze: they soak up coins during a weak market, lock them in staking, and when demand returns the thinned supply amplifies the move.
Lee’s framing of a coming “crypto spring” rests on exactly this idea, that the groundwork being laid in a sleepy market sets up an outsized response when the cycle turns. This is also where the other way to get exposure through equity enters the story: investors can buy ETH directly, use ETFs, or buy treasury equities like BitMine, each with different mechanics and risks.
The supply-squeeze thesis is not fantasy. It is a real market structure argument.
The question is whether the demand side arrives strongly enough to make the locked supply matter.
The bear case: who is the next buyer?
The pessimistic reading does not dispute the supply mechanics. It asks a different and harder question, and the sharpest version came from Bankless co-founder David Hoffman, who looked at the billions BitMine had poured into ether and asked simply where the next wave of buying would come from.
“Where will the next $18 billion of buying come from?” wrote David Hoffman, Bankless co-founder. That question is the whole bear case in one line.
The worry is that BitMine has become the marginal buyer, the single force holding up a price that would otherwise sag, and a market propped up by one buyer is fragile. The evidence for the concern is uncomfortable.
Ether spent much of 2026 trading well below the prices BitMine paid to accumulate its stack, dipping under $1,700 against an average cost on some large purchases above $2,000. That means the company is sitting on an unrealized loss on its core position.
Ether even traded below its 200-week moving average for the first time in its history, a level long treated as a deep-value floor. And BitMine has slowed its buying as it nears its target, which removes exactly the steady bid that helped support the market on the way up.
If the largest, most committed buyer is winding down its purchases while sitting underwater, the bear asks, who steps in to absorb the supply when sentiment turns, or worse, if a large holder is ever forced to sell?
A corner only works if you never have to exit it.
The reflexivity problem
The deeper risk is that the whole structure is reflexive, meaning the parts feed back on each other in a loop that runs powerfully in both directions.
BitMine’s ability to buy ether depends on its ability to raise money, by selling stock and preferred shares. That ability depends on its share price and investor enthusiasm, which in turn depend heavily on the price of ether.
When ether rises, BitMine’s holdings swell, its stock tends to climb, it can raise capital on good terms, and it buys more ether, which supports the price. The flywheel spins in the company’s favor.
The trouble is that the same loop runs in reverse. If ether falls, BitMine’s holdings shrink in value, its stock tends to fall with the token it tracks, raising new capital becomes expensive or impossible, and the steady buying that supported the market dries up just when it is most needed.
This is the vulnerability now stalking the entire treasury-company sector. Many of these firms, BitMine included, raise money partly on the promise that their shares trade at a premium to the value of the crypto they hold.
Through late 2025 and into 2026, a growing number began trading at a discount to their holdings instead, which breaks the engine that funds the buying. A sister corner of this world, the Bitcoin “digital credit” instruments issued by Strategy and its imitators, already wobbled in a single session in June when a leverage-driven selloff knocked their supposedly stable preferred shares well below par.
That is the treasury-company model under stress, and it is the warning BitMine investors cannot ignore. Different asset, similar machine.
BitMine’s bet is not just on ether. It is on the reflexive machine staying in its favorable gear, and reflexive machines are notorious for changing gears without warning.
Staking changes the math, but not only for the better
Staking sits at the center of both the bull and bear cases, and it deserves a closer look because it cuts both ways.
On the bullish side, staking is what makes the supply squeeze credible. Coins that are staked are committed to securing the network and are not sitting on an exchange ready to be dumped.
So the more ether BitMine stakes, the more it has truly removed from the liquid market instead of merely holding it in reserve. The staking yield also gives the company real income, which softens the “it is just a price bet” criticism and helps fund the preferred dividends.
But staked ether is not gone forever, and that is the catch. Staking can be undone.
If BitMine ever needed liquidity badly enough, it could begin unstaking and selling, and Ethereum’s exit queue, the mechanism that meters how quickly large amounts of staked ether can be withdrawn, would slow but not prevent it. The locked supply is locked by choice, not by law, and choices can reverse under pressure.
There is also a network-level concern that gets less attention. As one entity stakes an ever-larger share of all ether through its own validator platform, it accumulates influence over the network’s security and governance.
Concentration of staking power is precisely the kind of centralization Ethereum was designed to resist. The staking that makes BitMine’s corner real also makes it a single point of concern, both for the company’s own risk and for the network it is buying into.
The premium that secretly governs the whole bet
There is a single number that decides whether BitMine’s flywheel keeps spinning, and most coverage never mentions it. It is the relationship between the company’s market value and the value of the crypto it holds, the premium or discount to its net asset value.
When a treasury company’s shares trade above the worth of its coins, it commands a premium, and that premium is not a vanity metric. It is the fuel.
A company trading at a premium can issue new shares at a price higher than the per-share value of its holdings, use the proceeds to buy more crypto, and end up with more coin per share than before. The act of raising money makes existing shareholders richer in crypto terms, which is why these companies can buy so aggressively without diluting their own backers.
The mechanism runs in reverse the instant the premium flips to a discount. If BitMine’s shares trade below the value of the ether they represent, issuing new stock to buy more ether would destroy value for existing holders, handing them less coin per share.
So the company effectively loses its ability to raise cheap capital and keep buying. The steady bid that supported the market vanishes at exactly the moment it is most needed.
This is not a hypothetical failure mode. Across the treasury sector in late 2025 and into 2026, a growing number of these companies slid from premiums to discounts, and the ones that did found their growth engines stalling.
BitMine has so far been among the strongest names, helped by the sheer liquidity of its stock and the cash flow from staking. But it is not exempt from the gravity that pulls a premium toward parity over time.
This is the hinge on which the supply-squeeze thesis actually turns, and it reframes the whole debate. The bull case assumes BitMine can keep accumulating, locking ever more ether out of circulation until the squeeze bites.
But the ability to accumulate is not unlimited. It is a direct function of the premium, and the premium is a direct function of investor enthusiasm for the stock, which is itself a function of ether’s price and momentum.
So the supply squeeze is not a one-way ratchet that tightens regardless of conditions. It tightens only while the premium holds, and it can release if the premium collapses and the company is forced to slow or, in the grimmest scenario, to sell.
The number to watch is not how many coins BitMine owns today. It is whether the market keeps paying more for BitMine’s shares than the coins inside them are worth, because that premium is the thread the entire corner hangs from.
What it actually means for ether
Pull the threads together and a nuanced picture emerges, one that resists the clean headline in either direction.
BitMine’s accumulation is real, large, and genuinely removes a meaningful share of ether from circulation. Over time, in a recovering market, that could amplify price moves to the upside exactly as the bull case predicts.
A token whose supply is being quietly cornered by committed holders is structurally different from one whose float is fully liquid, and that difference is not imaginary. If demand returns while the float stays thin, the squeeze could be powerful.
The honest caveat is that the corner is held up by conviction and cash flow rather than by broad, proven demand, and that makes it conditional. The price of ether today is not being driven up by a stampede of new buyers.
It is being supported, in part, by one company’s relentless bid, financed by a reflexive capital machine, on a position it is currently underwater on. That can resolve in a supply squeeze that vindicates Tom Lee, or it can resolve in a slow grind where the marginal buyer runs out of room and the thin float cuts the other way, magnifying a decline.
That is where another crypto-treasury financing structure becomes relevant. Wall Street is building more ways to turn corporate balance sheets, dividends, preferred stock, and equity wrappers into crypto accumulation engines, but those engines all depend on investor demand staying intact.
The most useful way to watch BitMine is not as a prophecy but as an experiment whose result is still pending. It is testing whether a corporation can corner a slice of a major blockchain and make the supply mechanics work in its favor.
The answer will say as much about the durability of the entire treasury-company model as it does about the price of ether. The number to watch is not BitMine’s holdings. It is where the next $18 billion of buying comes from.
Frequently asked questions
How much Ethereum does BitMine own?
As of late June 2026, BitMine Immersion Technologies held more than 5.6 million ether, worth roughly $10 billion, which equals about 4.7% of Ethereum’s total supply of around 120.7 million coins. That makes it the largest single holder of ether in the world and the second-largest crypto treasury of any kind, behind Strategy’s Bitcoin position. The company has stated a goal of owning 5% of all ether, which it calls the “alchemy of 5%,” and it is roughly 94% of the way there.
What is BitMine’s “alchemy of 5%”?
It is the company’s stated strategy of accumulating 5% of all the ether that exists, roughly 6 million coins. BitMine, led by Fundstrat founder Tom Lee, pivoted from Bitcoin mining to an ether treasury model in 2025 and has been buying ether steadily through 2026, slowing its pace as it nears the target. The thesis is that ether demand will grow as Wall Street tokenizes assets on Ethereum and as automated AI systems come to rely on a neutral public blockchain, while committed holders like BitMine shrink the available supply.
Could a treasury company really squeeze Ethereum’s price?
It is plausible in mechanics but not guaranteed in practice. By buying ether and staking most of it, BitMine removes coins from the tradeable float, and a thinner float means new demand can move the price more. If demand returns while supply stays constricted, that can amplify an upward move, the supply-squeeze bull case. The counterargument is that the squeeze depends on continued buying and on demand actually arriving, and if BitMine is the main buyer and it slows down, the same thin float can magnify a decline instead.
Why is BitMine’s bet risky?
The strategy is reflexive: BitMine’s ability to buy ether depends on raising capital, which depends on its stock price, which depends on ether’s price. That loop is powerful when ether rises and dangerous when it falls, because falling prices choke off the funding that supports the buying. BitMine is also currently underwater on parts of its position, having paid more on average than ether’s mid-2026 price, and the wider treasury-company sector has seen shares slip to discounts to their holdings, which breaks the engine that funds accumulation.
What is MAVAN and why does it matter?
MAVAN, the Made in America Validator Network, is BitMine’s own staking platform, through which it stakes more than 83% of its ether to help secure Ethereum and earn a yield of roughly 2.7% to 2.8%. Staking matters two ways: it locks coins out of the liquid market, strengthening the supply-squeeze argument, and it generates recurring income that BitMine uses to support its preferred-stock dividends. The risk is that staking concentrates network influence in one large operator, a form of centralization Ethereum was built to avoid.
Is BitMine the same kind of company as Strategy?
It follows the same model with a different asset. Strategy, led by Michael Saylor, pioneered the publicly traded crypto-treasury vehicle by holding Bitcoin, giving stock-market investors indirect exposure to the coin. BitMine applies that template to ether, positioning itself as the Ethereum equivalent. Both raise capital through equity and preferred shares to fund accumulation, both rely on their shares trading well relative to their holdings, and both carry concentrated, single-asset risk that ties their fortunes tightly to one volatile token.
This article is information, not investment advice. Holdings, prices, and corporate plans change quickly, and figures for BitMine and the ether market reflect reporting available as of June 24, 2026. Verify current data with official sources before relying on anything described here.

