On April 20, 2026, Bitmine Immersion Technologies (NYSE: BMNR), the world’s largest institutional Ethereum holdings provider, released its latest weekly assets bulletin. Over the past week, the company bought 101,627 Ethereum (ETH) with more than $230 million in capital, setting the largest week of net accumulation since 2026 and also the highest weekly buy since mid-December 2025. As of April 19, 2026, Bitmine’s total ETH holdings had reached 4,976,485 ETH, accounting for 4.12% of Ethereum’s total circulating supply (about 120.7 million). At this scale, it is only about 1.06 million ETH short of its previously disclosed strategic goal—holding 5% of total Ethereum supply—achieving 82% of the target.

Bitmine’s current accumulation of 101,627 ETH is not an isolated market behavior, but a stage peak within the company’s accelerated buying for the fourth consecutive week. According to Chairman Tom Lee’s public remarks, the company has kept pace with adding ETH every week over the past four weeks. Its core judgment is that ETH is in the final stage of the so-called “mini crypto winter.”
Calculated using the market reference price range for the week of the purchases, the buyback involves a capital scale of more than $230 million. The company described this transaction as the largest single deal since its deployments in 2026, with total ETH holdings nearing 5 million. Notably, Bitmine’s buying cadence shows a clear cyclical pattern: during the fourth quarter of 2025 it maintained steady accumulation; in the first quarter of 2026, the buying frequency eased slightly; and after entering April, the accumulation strength expanded again and reached the annual peak. This change in cadence itself forms a signal worth watching—it suggests the company’s internal judgment is shifting from “observing” to “acting,” and that this action has been reinforced continuously over the past four weeks rather than occurring sporadically.
Bitmine’s Ethereum holdings strategy is not a simple buy-and-hold approach, but a quantifiable cash-flow model built around staking returns. The company has staked about 3,334,637 ETH, representing roughly 67% of its total holdings. Based on the data the company disclosed, its 7-day annualized staking yield is approximately 2.88%, higher than Ethereum’s overall network-wide staking rate of 2.76%. At this yield, the annualized revenue generated by the already staked portion is about $221 million. If, in the future, the company completes staking deployment for all its ETH holdings, the annualized returns are expected to rise to roughly $330 million.
This return structure makes Bitmine’s Ethereum holdings distinct from traditional corporate asset allocation models—it is neither speculative exposure that relies solely on asset price appreciation, nor a static reserve without yield, but a productive asset that can generate positive cash flow continuously. For a publicly listed company, the significance of this model is that staking returns can be recognized directly in the income statement, providing sustainable operational support to the balance sheet and, to a certain extent, buffering the impact of ETH price volatility on financial conditions.
Tom Lee placed this round of accumulation within a clear macro judgment framework. Its core logic can be summarized into two verifiable dimensions:
Together, the logic of these two dimensions supports Bitmine’s strategy of strongly加碼 (accelerating) over the past four weeks. It should be noted that validation of this judgment depends on the direction of subsequent macro variables—if the extent of the U.S. equities drawdown expands further, or geopolitical risk continues to escalate, the premise of this logic would change.
Bitmine is not just an isolated institutional Ethereum holder; it is a leader in a forming institutional track. According to data from the on-chain tracking platform StrategicETHReserve, over the past 30 days, holdings changes among Ethereum vault-type companies have shown clear divergence: Bitmine ranks first with a 41% increase in its stake. Next are SharpLink Gaming (about a 153.8% increase) and The Ether Machine (about an 8% increase). Meanwhile, the Ethereum Foundation saw about a 4.47% decline in its holdings.
In the ranking of the top ten ETH holders globally, Bitmine continues to sit at the top as the leading institutional Ethereum vault. Its overall scale is only behind Bitcoin vault company Strategy. Looking at the broader institutional holdings landscape, there are currently 68 institutions holding more than 100 ETH, with total holdings of 6.81 million ETH, equivalent to 5.63% of Ethereum’s total supply. Of these, 20 are publicly listed companies, together holding about 6 million ETH. This data indicates that Ethereum’s institutionalization process has spread beyond early movers into a wider group of publicly listed companies—Ethereum vaults are becoming an asset allocation category distinct from Bitcoin vaults.
However, compared with the Bitcoin vault track, the overall scale of the Ethereum vault track is still in an early stage. Strategy’s Bitcoin holdings account for about 3.88% of BTC’s total supply, while Bitmine’s Ethereum holdings account for about 4.12% of ETH’s total supply—both are nearing similar relative weight in their respective ecosystems. Still, the Ethereum vault track has a significant gap in terms of the number of institutions and market depth.
When a publicly listed company holds more than 4% of the total ETH supply, its impact on tokenomics can be understood through three structural dimensions:
From a more macro view of supply and demand structure, Ethereum’s total staked amount across the network has exceeded 39 million ETH, with the staking rate surpassing 32%, and the number of active validators exceeding 920k. Against this backdrop, Bitmine’s continued buying and staking behavior is effectively further reinforcing the locking effect on top of an existing trend toward tightening supply.
A side-by-side comparison of Bitmine’s Ethereum strategy and Strategy’s Bitcoin strategy helps clarify the定位 differences between the two assets at the corporate vault level. Strategy’s Bitcoin holdings as of April 19, 2026 reached 815,061 BTC, with cumulative investment of about $61.56 billion. The holdings represent about 3.88% of Bitcoin’s total supply. Its core strategic features include: proactively raising capital through financing instruments such as issuing STRC perpetual preferred shares; adhering to an “only buy, never sell” HODL policy; and using BTC Yield as the key performance metric to track the growth in per-share Bitcoin holdings. Bitmine’s strategy path shows different characteristics: about 67% of its holdings are staked into the staking network, with staking returns forming a stable source of cash flow; its accumulation cadence is highly tied to macro judgment, with a stronger element of cycle timing; and its staking platform MAVAN is also opening to institutional partners, extending from being merely an asset manager to becoming a staking infrastructure provider. The core difference between the two is this: the logic of the Bitcoin vault is built on the value-storage narrative of “digital gold + anti-inflation,” and the asset itself does not generate cash flow. The logic of the Ethereum vault is built on the narrative of “digital infrastructure + staking returns as a productive asset,” where the asset can obtain ongoing returns by participating in the network. This difference makes ETH uniquely attractive to institutional investors seeking yield— in a low-interest-rate environment, a staking yield of roughly 3% to 4% can be a measurable allocation rationale.
Corporate ETH vault strategies do not have no boundary conditions. From a sustainability perspective, this strategy depends on the stability of three core variables: the relative attractiveness of ETH staking yields, the continuity of the company’s financing capacity, and the market’s recognition of ETH prices. On staking yields, Ethereum’s network-wide annualized yield is currently about 3.12%, down from the 2025 peak. If staking yields fall further in the future, the cash-flow attractiveness of institutional vaults would be compressed. In terms of financing capability, Bitmine’s continued buying depends on the health of its balance sheet. Although its Q1 financial report recorded a book loss, staking income grew by 7x and operating cash flow remained strong—whether this condition can be maintained still needs continuous observation. On the price front, the book value of Bitmine’s holdings is directly linked to the ETH price. According to Gate market data, as of April 21, 2026, Ethereum is quoted at about $2,305.53, still with an approximate 53% price gap compared with the historical high of $4,946.05 in August 2025. If ETH prices decline further, even if the number of holdings remains unchanged, the book value of the assets would shrink accordingly. In addition, regulatory uncertainty is also a variable that cannot be ignored—the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is still evolving its accounting treatment rules and disclosure requirements for corporate holdings of crypto assets, and any rule change could affect the feasibility and attractiveness of corporate vault strategies.
Q: What is Bitmine’s current total ETH holdings, and how far is it from the 5% target?
As of April 19, 2026, Bitmine holds 4,976,485 ETH, accounting for 4.12% of Ethereum’s total supply. It needs about 1.06 million ETH more to reach the 5% target, and the target completion rate is about 82%.
Q: How much ETH does Bitmine use for staking, and what is the annualized return?
Bitmine has staked about 3,334,637 ETH, representing about 67% of its total holdings, with annualized staking income of about $221 million. If it achieves full-balance staking, the annualized returns are expected to reach roughly $330 million.
Q: What is the fundamental difference between Bitmine’s and Strategy’s corporate vault strategies?
Strategy’s Bitcoin strategy is centered on “digital gold + anti-inflation,” and the holdings themselves do not produce cash flow. Bitmine’s Ethereum strategy is centered on “digital infrastructure + staking returns,” and the holdings can provide ongoing returns through staking. The difference between the two reflects their different positioning in institutional asset-allocation logic for Bitcoin versus Ethereum.
Q: What is Ethereum’s staking yield right now?
As of mid-April 2026, Ethereum’s network-wide annualized staking yield (APR) is approximately 3.12%. Because different staking platforms and products have differences in reward mechanisms, the actual yield ranges from about 2.8% to 4.3%.
Q: What impact does Bitmine’s current buy on amount have on ETH market supply?
Bitmine has staked about 67% of its ETH holdings. These assets are locked within the consensus mechanism and do not participate in short-term trading. Against the backdrop of Ethereum exchange reserves falling to the lowest level since 2016, such long-term holdings further compress circulating supply and produce a continuous tightening effect on the supply-demand structure.
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