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Been watching this BitMine situation unfold and honestly it's becoming a pretty interesting case study in how governance faultlines emerge when corporate strategy meets shareholder protection.
So Tom Lee's pushing for authorized shares to jump from 500 million to 50 billion. On the surface it's framed as flexibility for future stock splits when Ethereum hits extreme prices. But here's where the faultline starts showing - the company already has roughly 426 million shares outstanding, so why the urgency now for something theoretical years away? Investors are rightfully asking if this is really about future optionality or just clearing a path to keep issuing equity for ETH purchases.
What's getting under people's skin is the sheer scale of it. Even to hit BitMine's stated 5% ETH allocation target, they'd only need a fraction of 50 billion authorized shares. One analyst called it massive overkill, basically handing management a blank check with no future shareholder checkpoints. That's the kind of governance move that creates a real faultline between what management wants and what shareholders actually signed up for.
Then there's the compensation structure. Tying Tom Lee's performance bonus to total ETH holdings rather than ETH per share sounds good until you think it through - it rewards pure scale regardless of dilution. You could hit your ETH targets while simultaneously eroding per-share value. It's like dividing a cake into more pieces to make it look bigger.
The dilution math gets worse when you consider BitMine's no longer trading at a premium to NAV. When you have that much authorization flexibility and shares trade near parity, the incentives shift dangerously toward below-NAV issuance. That permanently reduces ETH backing per share. One investor put it bluntly - if you're going to own Ethereum exposure, why not just own ETH directly instead of holding equity that could get diluted?
What's interesting is most critics still believe in the Ethereum thesis. They're not rejecting the strategy, they're questioning the structure. They want guardrails. Clearer metrics. Actual governance protections before handing management a blank check tied to one of crypto's most volatile assets. That's a reasonable ask, and right now it feels like management's not really hearing it.