
Key Insights:
- Bitmine, led by Tom Lee, has launched a Saylor-style preferred stock structure, raising about $280 million, with proceeds directed toward expanding its Ethereum treasury and staking operations.
- BitMine mirrors Michael Saylor’s Strategy approach by raising capital through structured equity instruments and deploying it into crypto assets to compound its long-term holdings.
- The key difference is yield: Bitcoin does not generate native income, while Ethereum can generate roughly 3% staking yield.
Bitmine Immersion Technologies has launched a $280–300 million preferred stock offering modeled on Michael Saylor’s bitcoin treasury strategy. However, it is designed for Ethereum and its staking yield, according to company disclosures.
The firm priced a 9.50% perpetual preferred stock. It will trade on the NYSE under the ticker BMNP. The company plans to use the proceeds to buy more Ether. It will also expand its staking and validator operations. The shares carry a $100 face value and pay a fixed $9.50 annual dividend, distributed weekly in cash.
Tom Lee Adopts Saylor’s Strategy for Ethereum
The structure closely follows the template used by Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy). The firm under Michael Saylor issued a similar preferred instrument, STRC, to fund bitcoin accumulation. The product pays a higher yield of about 11–11.5% and relies on Bitcoin holdings for backing rather than income generation.
Bitmine’s version applies the same capital-raising approach to Ethereum. The company said it plans to issue 3–3.5 million Series A preferred shares, aiming to raise roughly $280–300 million. The securities could begin trading within about 30 days of issuance.
Like the Strategy model, the preferred shares include cumulative dividends and structured redemption terms. The redemption value steps down from 110% of face value in the first 18 months to 100% after three years.
The design can keep the security close to par while channeling investor capital into crypto assets rather than diluting common shareholders.

The key difference between the two approaches lies in yield generation. Bitcoin does not produce native income, forcing Strategy to rely on capital markets or asset sales to meet obligations. Strategy previously disclosed selling 32 BTC to help cover dividend payments on its preferred stock.
Ethereum, by contrast, can be staked to generate annual yields estimated at 3% to 5%. Bitmine has positioned this feature as central to its financing model. It argued that staking rewards can partially offset dividend obligations and reduce the need to sell Ether during downturns.
Bitmine’s ETH Hoard and Paper Losses
According to Bitmine disclosures, it has staked about 87% of its Ether holdings. It is producing an estimated $258 million in annualized staking revenue.
The company projects this could rise above $290 million as its validator infrastructure expands. Against this, annual dividend obligations on the new preferred stock estimate at roughly $28.5 million.
The scale of Bitmine’s Ethereum holdings underpins the strategy. The company reported holding about 5.4 million ETH as of late May 2026, equivalent to roughly 4.5% of total supply. At recent market prices, the position is valued at about $10–11.6 billion.
Despite its large position, Bitmine is sitting on significant unrealized losses after Ethereum fell from near $5,000 to below $1,800 in early June.
The company’s chairman, Tom Lee, has acknowledged these paper losses while maintaining a positive long-term outlook on Ethereum’s fundamentals.
The post Saylor Built the Playbook for Bitcoin, Tom Lee Thinks Ethereum Fixes It appeared first on The Coin Republic.


