
Fundstrat’s Tom Lee urged investors at Consensus Hong Kong 2026 to stop waiting for the perfect entry and start buying the dip. Hours later, his own publicly traded firm, BitMine Immersion, added another $83 million in ETH—despite sitting on $7.5 billion in unrealized losses. We analyze the strategy, the history, and what it means for Ethereum’s next move.
On February 11, 2026, Thomas Lee walked onto the main stage at Consensus Hong Kong 2026 and delivered a message that cut sharply against the prevailing market sentiment.
“You should be thinking about opportunities here instead of selling.”
Lee, the chief investment officer of Fundstrat Global Advisors and chairman of BitMine Immersion Technologies, did not hedge. He did not couch his language in the conditional tense favored by analysts who fear being wrong on Twitter. He looked at a crypto market down $2 trillion from its peak, at Bitcoin suffering its worst drawdown since 2022, at Ethereum hovering near $1,950, and he said: this is the window.
He called the current environment a “mini winter.” Not the deep freeze of 2022, but cold enough to separate conviction from capitulation. His logic was layered but legible: gold has likely peaked for the year, capital will rotate back into digital assets, and the investors who win in 2026 are the ones who accumulate while sentiment is still rated “Extreme Fear.”
Lee’s words alone would have been noteworthy. But what makes this moment different is what his firm did next.
On the same day Lee delivered his keynote, BitMine Immersion Technologies—a publicly traded Ethereum treasury firm he chairs—filed an 8-K with the SEC and issued a press release.
The company had acquired an additional 40,613 ETH at an average price near $2,050, spending approximately $83.2 million.
This was not a symbolic purchase. BitMine now holds 4,325,738 Ethereum tokens, a position valued at over $8.8 billion at current market prices. This represents approximately 3.58% of the entire circulating supply of ETH. No public company holds more Ethereum.
What makes the acquisition striking is the context. BitMine’s average cost basis on its first 3.7 million tokens, acquired throughout 2024 and early 2025, exceeds $4,000 per ETH. According to data from analytics platform DropStab, the firm’s unrealized losses currently stand at nearly $7.5 billion.
This is not a company buying at the bottom to lower its average. This is a company buying at $2,100 when it is already $7.5 billion underwater on its existing position.
Lee addressed this directly in the firm’s statement: “BitMine has been steadily buying Ethereum, as we view this pullback as attractive, given the strengthening fundamentals. In our view, the price of ETH is not reflective of the high utility of ETH and its role as the future of finance.”
For readers encountering this entity for the first time, a brief primer is necessary.
BitMine Immersion Technologies (ticker: BMNR) began as a Bitcoin mining operation focused on immersion cooling technology. In late 2023, under Lee’s strategic direction, the company pivoted decisively. It began accumulating Ethereum at scale, transforming its balance sheet into what is effectively a massive, publicly traded Ethereum treasury vehicle.
The firm operates on a model distinct from MicroStrategy’s Bitcoin accumulation strategy. Where MicroStrategy uses debt and equity offerings to acquire Bitcoin, BitMine generates Ethereum exposure through operating cash flow, selective debt issuance, and at times, direct market purchases. The company files quarterly reports with the SEC, providing unusual transparency into its cost basis and holdings.
As of February 11, 2026, BMNR shares trade near $21.18, down approximately 59% over the last six months—a decline that closely mirrors Ethereum’s 62% drawdown from its August 2025 all-time high.
The market’s response to BitMine’s continued buying has been mixed. Skeptics view the firm’s persistent accumulation as a form of averaging into a failing thesis—a public company equivalent of catching a falling knife.
Supporters, including a growing cohort of institutional investors tracking the Ethereum treasury narrative, interpret it differently. They see a management team with multi-year time horizons, insulated from quarterly performance anxiety by Lee’s personal credibility and the firm’s operational cash flow.
The truth likely sits in the middle. BitMine’s average cost basis of approximately $4,000 per ETH on its core position means the firm requires Ethereum to nearly double from current levels simply to return to breakeven on those tokens. This is not a short-term trade. This is a structural bet on Ethereum’s dominance as the settlement layer for decentralized finance, tokenization, and institutional blockchain adoption.
What the skeptics miss: BitMine does not need to sell. It is not a hedge fund facing redemptions. It is an operating company with mining revenue, public equity currency, and a chairman who has spent 30 years explaining why bear markets are where fortunes are built.
During his Consensus Hong Kong address, Lee referenced a specific data point that deserves closer examination.
He noted that Ethereum has experienced eight prior declines of 50% or more since 2018. In each instance, the asset subsequently staged a V-shaped recovery that recaptured the majority of lost ground within 3-12 months.
The Historical Record:
2018: ETH falls 94% from $1,400 to $80. Recovery begins late 2018, accelerates into 2019.
2020: COVID crash takes ETH from $288 to $90 (-68%). Full recovery within 12 months.
2021: May correction drops ETH from $4,300 to $1,700 (-60%). All-time high reached five months later.
2022: Terra collapse, 3AC liquidation, FTX fraud drive ETH from $3,500 to $880 (-75%). Recovery begins Q1 2023.
2024: Pre-halving correction pulls ETH from $4,000 to $2,800 (-30%)—not counted in the eight, but notable.
2025: August peak at $4,946; February 2026 low near $1,824. Current drawdown: 63%.
The pattern is not predictive in a mechanical sense. No law of markets requires history to rhyme. But for investors who lived through these cycles, the repetition carries weight. Ethereum has been declared dead, obsolete, and technologically inferior in every one of these drawdowns. In each cycle, it has survived and eventually exceeded prior highs.
Lee’s specific call on ETH: he believes the asset may need to briefly dip below $1,800 to form what technician Tom DeMark calls a “perfected bottom”—a low that exhausts remaining sellers and establishes clean support before the next leg higher.
A critical component of Lee’s macro argument deserves separate treatment.
Throughout 2025, Bitcoin dramatically underperformed gold. While the yellow metal surged to new all-time highs above $3,000 per ounce, drawing institutional capital seeking hard-asset exposure amid geopolitical uncertainty, Bitcoin stagnated and then declined. This divergence frustrated Bitcoin maximalists who had long argued that digital gold would eventually displace physical gold in institutional portfolios.
Lee’s interpretation: gold has now likely peaked for this cycle. The marginal buyer of gold in 2025 was momentum, not conviction. As gold consolidates or corrects, capital will rotate back into risk assets, and Bitcoin—now trading at a 50% discount from its October high—offers asymmetric upside.
This is not a novel thesis. What makes it worth examining is its application to Ethereum. Lee explicitly linked Bitcoin’s expected outperformance to ETH’s recovery trajectory, arguing that a stabilizing Bitcoin dominance environment historically benefits Ethereum and the broader altcoin ecosystem.
For traders and investors attempting to synthesize this information into actionable strategy, a tiered framework may be useful.
For the Skeptical Observer:
The primary trend remains bearish. BitMine’s $83 million purchase is a data point, not a trend reversal signal. Until Ethereum reclaims its 200-day moving average near $2,800 and establishes a higher-high structure on the weekly chart, the path of least resistance is lower. Position sizing should reflect this uncertainty.
For the Contrarian Accumulator:
Lee’s historical framing is empirically correct: Ethereum has recovered from every 50%+ drawdown in its history. The current drawdown of 63% ranks among the deepest in the asset’s lifetime, exceeded only by the 94% collapse of 2018 and the 75% crash of 2022. Dollar-cost averaging into positions below $2,000, with a multi-year holding horizon, has historically generated substantial returns.
For the BitMine Observer:
BMNR shares currently trade at a significant discount to the net asset value of their Ethereum holdings. This discount reflects market skepticism about the firm’s cost basis and the potential for forced liquidation. Investors who believe Ethereum will ultimately recover above $4,000 may find the equity more attractive than the token itself, though corporate structure and management execution risk must be factored.
Lee’s reference to technician Tom DeMark requires brief explanation.
DeMark’s methodology identifies exhaustion points in price trends. A “perfected bottom” occurs when an asset makes a new low but certain sequential indicators suggest selling pressure is depleted. It is not a timing tool for exact bottoms, but a framework for recognizing when downside momentum is likely to exhaust itself.
Lee’s suggestion that ETH may need to briefly dip below $1,800 before a sustained recovery is not a prediction of an imminent crash. It is an acknowledgment that the cleanest recoveries often emerge from levels that flush out remaining weak hands.
At current prices near $1,950, this places the potential perfected bottom approximately 8% below market.
Tom Lee spent Wednesday morning telling the crypto industry to stop waiting for the perfect entry and start buying the dip.
By Wednesday afternoon, his firm had converted that philosophy into $83 million of balance sheet exposure.
This is the distinction between market commentary and capital commitment. Analysts can recommend patience indefinitely because they bear no opportunity cost. Corporate fiduciaries who deploy shareholder capital at $2,100 ETH while sitting on $7.5 billion of unrealized losses are making a statement that cannot be hedged with qualifiers.
Whether that statement proves prescient or catastrophic will be determined not by Lee’s rhetoric, but by Ethereum’s performance through the remainder of this cycle.
What is not debatable: BitMine’s cumulative position of 4.32 million ETH represents one of the largest concentrated bets on Ethereum’s future ever assembled within a public company structure. That bet is now $7.5 billion underwater. And they just doubled down.
In markets, this is either the setup for a case study in conviction or a cautionary tale about the inability to accept sunk costs. February 2026 does not yet reveal which chapter this becomes.
What it does reveal: Tom Lee believes, with sufficient conviction to risk both his professional credibility and his firm’s balance sheet, that the Ethereum trade of 2026 will be won by those who bought when the Fear & Greed Index printed 10.
The index remains at 10. The bid is in.
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