A particular type of stock attracts attention due to what it contains rather than what it produces. That’s precisely what Bitmine Immersion Technologies is now. The company was founded in 2019 and has its headquarters in a part of Las Vegas that doesn’t feel like Wall Street. It has about 5.39 million Ether tokens, which can be worth more than ten billion dollars depending on the day. The chart appears worn out, and the shares closed Friday at $19.27, slightly higher in after-hours trading. Anyone who has been watching this name for a year would know why.
Price isn’t the only aspect of the story. It concerns Tom Lee, the company’s chairman, who has been publicly arguing for months that Ethereum is overpriced. Ether’s decline below $2,200 was described by Lee, who is well-known for his Fundstrat research and his effortless presence on financial television, as “an attractive opportunity,” and Bitmine’s approach reflects that belief. They continue to purchase. The company purchased an additional 25,000 ETH for over $50 million just this week, continuing a treasury strategy that has started to feel more like devotion than accumulation.
There is a cost associated with that devotion. Bitmine revealed an unrealized net loss of about $3.8 billion in its most recent disclosures. Almost any board of directors would be uncomfortable when they saw the number on the books. However, compared to a typical industrial company, the math here is different. Bitmine is no longer a miner in the traditional sense. Stock investors can purchase Ether using this publicly traded vehicle without ever opening a wallet. The structure is reminiscent of MicroStrategy, which has since changed its name to Strategy. MicroStrategy used the same strategy with Bitcoin and saw its value rise and then fall.
In trades like this, it’s difficult to ignore how thin the line is between excess and brilliance. On Friday, strategy increased by almost 5%. Bitmine increased by just a tenth of a percent. The two stocks no longer move together, but they still rhyme, and this difference is starting to be discussed.
Currently, there are mechanical reasons to be concerned about BMNR. Bitmine was added to FTSE Russell’s initial list of potential Russell 3000 additions. The final reconstitution is planned for June 26, after the U.S. close. Passive funds will be needed to buy in if inclusion holds. That is significant for a stock that is trading close to $18.30, a level it has already tested three times this year without breaking through.

A bearish flag appears beneath the 50-day moving average, according to technicians. The next topic of conversation is $15 if it confirms. The same chart begins to resemble a Wyckoff accumulation, the slow phase that frequently precedes a markup, if buyers defend $18.30 once more. There are respectable proponents of both interpretations. Neither has yet been shown to be correct.
There are actual moving parts at work beneath the chart. According to Lee, Bitmine is producing an annualized reward stream of about $276 million by staking more Ether than any other organization in the world. The company is shifting its focus from dilutive share sales to yield, a move that management has stated it anticipates finishing once it reaches its 5% Ethereum ownership goal. The pivot would alter the true nature of this stock. As of right now, BMNR is essentially an Ether leveraged proxy. Following the change, it may begin to resemble a crypto-yield utility, an odd new species that the market is still figuring out how to value.
The dangers are not concealed. The company itself highlights these issues in its annual report: fluctuations in the price of ETH and Bitcoin, potential dilution, and regulatory ambiguity regarding custody and staking. Spot Ethereum ETFs lost $540 million in May alone, making it their worst month of the year. Over the course of a year, the total value locked in Ethereum DeFi has dropped from $88 billion to $42 billion. It appears that investors think the bottom is in. There is currently disagreement in the data.
As this develops, it seems that Bitmine has evolved into a stock about belief—belief in Lee, belief in Ether’s eventual recovery, and belief that staking yields can bridge the gap until the market rerates. Years ago, Tesla encountered similar skepticism. The next few quarters will determine whether Bitmine turns into a similar tale or just another cautionary tale.
