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I just noticed something interesting happening in the institutional market. Tom Lee, that Wall Street strategist who has been pondering Bitcoin and Ethereum for years, has recently taken on the presidency of BitMine. And this is no ordinary move: the company is transforming from traditional mining to a strategy of massive ETH accumulation at the corporate level.
To understand why this matters, you need to know a bit about Lee’s background. He’s not the type to just throw predictions into the air. He’s been working on Wall Street since the 90s, went through Kidder Peabody, Salomon Smith Barney, and was chief equity strategist at JPMorgan for years. His style has always been based on hard data, not speculation. He even had that famous episode in 2002 when he critically analyzed Nextel, causing its stock to drop 8% in a day. The company’s management accused him of everything, but JPMorgan investigated and confirmed he was right. Since then, Lee has become known for not yielding to pressure.
In 2014, he founded Fundstrat Global Advisors, an independent research firm, and was among the first on Wall Street to incorporate Bitcoin into conventional valuation models. His 2017 framework viewing Bitcoin as a gold substitute was quite influential. But what I find most relevant now is his stance on Ethereum and stablecoins.
Lee has been very vocal in recent months about what’s happening with stablecoins. He says it’s the “ChatGPT moment for the crypto sector.” The global stablecoin market already exceeds $250 billion, with more than 50% of issuance occurring on Ethereum. When Wall Street and the U.S. Treasury started backing this, Ethereum became the key infrastructure connecting crypto finance with traditional finance.
From his role at BitMine, Lee explained why publicly traded companies focused on Ethereum have clear structural advantages. First, they can buy ETH by issuing shares when the price is above net asset value, creating a reflexive effect on NAV. Second, they can use convertible bonds and options sales to hedge volatility and reduce financing costs. Third, they have the capacity to acquire other on-chain financial assets. Fourth, they can expand staking businesses, DeFi income, and infrastructure. And fifth, once their ETH position becomes central in the ecosystem, they could turn into strategic assets for institutional acquisitions.
In mid-July, BitMine revealed that its ETH holdings reached 566,776 coins, valued at over $2 billion. That’s nearly 8 times the initial amount from the funding round. Founders Fund took a 9.1% stake, and ARK Invest also bought millions in shares to convert everything into ETH reserves.
What Tom Lee is pointing out is that Ethereum is currently the only major blockchain that meets regulatory adaptability, ecosystem maturity, and economies of scale. Platforms like Robinhood are already launching stock tokenization via Ethereum Layer 2. More and more institutions are seeking a chain that hosts real-world assets and complies with regulations, and Ethereum is that meeting point.
Fundstrat analysts set a short-term technical target for ETH at $4,000, with a fair value by year-end between $10,000 and $15,000. Lee commented that allocating ETH at current price levels is an effective way to potentially achieve a tenfold increase for corporate finance.
What’s interesting here is that Lee isn’t a crypto maximalist simply preaching from social media. He’s someone who has been on the institutional side, who has seen market cycles, who was wrong during the telecom bubble in the 90s and learned tough lessons before 2008. Now he’s betting his capital and credibility that Ethereum is the infrastructure of the future for institutions. That says a lot.