This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency markets are highly volatile. Always do your own research before making any investment decisions.
Bitmine Immersion Technologies (NYSE: BMNR) has accumulated 4.24 million ETH against a stated target of 5.2 million — leaving roughly 960,000 ETH still to buy. The company’s weekly purchase rate has dropped sharply, according to CoinDesk, signalling a deliberate tactical pause rather than an abandonment of its Ethereum treasury strategy.
The slowdown arrives just as Ethereum’s market structure is showing signs of tightening supply, with Tom Lee of Fundstrat Global Advisors projecting an ETH price above $10,000 by end-2026 if institutional accumulation continues at the pace set over Q1. The gap between Bitmine’s pace and its target is now the central variable in Ethereum’s near-term institutional demand outlook.
How much Bitmine has accumulated — and how fast
Bitmine entered 2026 with an aggressive accumulation schedule, at one point adding 264,378 ETH in a single purchase that lifted its holdings to 2.42 million tokens, according to data tracked by Whale Insider. By early May the company had reached 4.24 million ETH — 81% of its 5.2 million ceiling — after a further 40,302 ETH purchase, according to CoinMarketCap data.
The most recent weekly filing covers 101,627 ETH added in the company’s largest single-week accumulation in four months, according to Wu Blockchain. That figure, however, is already lower than the pace needed to reach the 5.2 million target within the company’s original timeline.
Bitmine Adds 101,627 ETH in Biggest Weekly Accumulation in 4 Months
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) April 20, 2026
Bitmine Immersion Technologies added 101,627 ETH last week, marking its fastest pace of accumulation since the week of December 15, 2025. As of April 19, 2026, the company holds a total of 4,976,485 ETH,… pic.twitter.com/j6EGixRZTK
The funding mechanism has drawn scrutiny. Bitmine has executed at least two registered direct offerings — including a $365 million raise at $70 per share — to finance ETH purchases without diluting existing shareholders through open-market sales, according to the company’s own disclosures.
Critics note that the offering price implies a premium over net asset value, creating an equity-funding cost that rises as ETH’s price rises. That dynamic creates a natural incentive to slow purchases when ETH trades near all-time highs, which may explain the current pace moderation.
🧵🪡
— Bitmine (NYSE-BMNR) $ETH (@BitMNR) September 22, 2025
BitMine today made two announcements:
– $365.24 million registered direct offering at $70 per $BMNR share
– $ETH holdings >2% of Ethereum supply or 2.4 million
…keep reading 📕
Link 🔗 https://t.co/zeBxddSuhd
Link 🔗 https://t.co/mw9hL8rC2S
Ticker: $BMNR
Chairman:…
Why the pace is slowing — and what Bitmine has said
CoinDesk reported in early May that Bitmine’s management is actively reviewing whether to reduce the weekly accumulation rate in response to Ethereum’s price appreciation since February. The company has not formally revised the 5.2 million ETH target downward, but internal discussion about “pace flexibility” suggests the ceiling may function as a ceiling rather than a firm commitment.
Tom Lee, managing partner at Fundstrat Global Advisors and a Bitmine board advisor, has separately stated that the company views its ETH holdings as a long-duration position rather than a trading book — implying that pace matters less than the terminal accumulation figure.
The slowdown also coincides with a broader shift in how corporate treasury boards evaluate crypto assets. Bitmine’s model — raising equity capital to buy a digital asset — mirrors the MicroStrategy playbook that drove Bitcoin’s institutional adoption phase between 2020 and 2022.
For Ethereum, which does not have Bitcoin’s fixed supply cap, the supply-reduction argument is weaker, but the staking yield dynamic strengthens the case. Bitmine’s ETH holdings, if staked, would generate approximately 3.2% annually at current network yields, partially offsetting the equity financing cost.
ETH price implications: what analysts say
Tom Lee, managing partner at Fundstrat Global Advisors, has set an ETH price target of $10,000 by end-2026, contingent on continued institutional inflows and the sustained removal of supply from liquid circulation through staking and corporate treasury strategies, according to The Block.
Lee’s case is structural: every ETH locked in a corporate treasury or staking contract reduces the float available for spot market sellers, mechanically tightening supply. If Bitmine completes its 5.2 million target, it would represent approximately 4.3% of Ethereum’s total circulating supply — a meaningful structural bid.
Geoffrey Kendrick, head of digital assets research at Standard Chartered, has published an ETH target of $7,500 for mid-2026, noting that Ethereum’s transition to a deflationary fee-burn model post-Merge makes it more sensitive to demand shocks than Bitcoin, according to Reuters.
Kendrick’s scenario requires that Layer 2 transaction volumes continue generating sufficient fee burns to keep net ETH issuance negative — a condition that has held for most of 2025 but is not guaranteed if L2 activity slows. The bear case, in Kendrick’s framing, does not require a collapse: it only requires that institutional accumulation slows enough to stop the supply squeeze from tightening further.
The bear case does not require a catastrophe. It only requires that Bitmine formally revises its 5.2 million target downward, triggering a reversal of the institutional demand narrative.
VanEck‘s digital assets team has modelled an ETH floor of $2,400 under a scenario where corporate treasury demand normalises and L2 fee burns fall below the break-even issuance rate, according to 24/7 Wall St. That downside scenario would represent a 60%-plus decline from the prices implied by Lee’s bull case, a range wide enough to confirm genuine two-way risk.
Bottom line: what to watch
Three specific indicators will determine which end of the range materialises. First, Bitmine’s weekly ETH purchase disclosures: any formal revision to the 5.2 million target would reset the institutional demand narrative and likely trigger a supply-floor repricing.
Second, the Ethereum fee-burn rate on Ultrasound.money: sustained negative net issuance is the supply-side condition underpinning the bull case; a flip to positive issuance removes a structural support. Third, the pending US ETH staking ETF applications: SEC decisions are expected before Q4 2026, and approval would open Ethereum to yield-generating institutional products that expand the buyer pool beyond treasury-style vehicles like Bitmine’s.
The range between $2,400 and $10,000 is not a hedge — it is the honest answer given what is currently known.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Always conduct independent research and consult a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.