
Ethereum has been stuck in a prolonged downtrend. Prices are down more than 60 percent from the August 2025 highs, sentiment is shaky, and some analysts are floating scenarios where ETH could revisit the $1,400 level before finding a durable bottom.
And yet, through all that noise, something else is happening in the background.
Investors are still buying BitMine, as BitMine is buying more Ethereum.
Not trimming. Not waiting. Buying. In some cases, buying aggressively.
The broader crypto market has been under pressure for months. Spot Ethereum ETFs have seen notable outflows, a sharp contrast to the steady demand flowing into Bitcoin products. That divergence has reinforced the narrative that institutions are leaning toward relative safety in BTC while treating ETH with more caution.
Ethereum’s price action reflects that hesitation. Lower highs, fading rallies, and persistent risk off positioning have defined the tape. Even bullish long term analysts concede that the near term setup remains fragile.
But the selloff has not scared everyone away.
BitMine Immersion Technologies, (BMNR), has quietly become one of the largest corporate holders of ETH after pivoting to an Ethereum treasury strategy in 2025 under Chairman Tom Lee.
The company has accumulated millions of tokens, building a balance sheet that is heavily exposed to Ethereum. That exposure has not looked pretty on paper during the drawdown. Reports show billions in unrealized losses as ETH retraced from its highs.
Still, BitMine has continued to add.
Rather than slowing purchases during weakness, the company has leaned into the downturn. The logic appears straightforward. If the long term thesis around Ethereum remains intact, lower prices represent opportunity rather than risk.
It is a classic buy the dip strategy, but on a corporate scale.
Cathie Wood’s Ark Invest has reinforced that narrative. The firm has repeatedly increased its exposure to BitMine across multiple ETFs, adding millions of dollars worth of BMNR shares even as Ethereum remained under pressure. The firm bought a total of 212,314 shares across three of its exchange-traded funds, worth $4.2 million based on Thursday's closing price.
Ark has a history of leaning into volatility in high conviction themes. Crypto infrastructure and blockchain exposure remain central to its long horizon strategy. In that context, adding BitMine during a downtrend fits the pattern.
For Ark, the weakness in ETH may be noise relative to the structural growth story around smart contracts, tokenization, and onchain financial rails.
It is not just Ark.
BlackRock has also boosted its BMNR position significantly, increasing its holdings by more than 165 percent according to recent disclosures. That scale of increase is difficult to ignore, especially in a market where Ethereum linked products have seen soft flows.
The timing is notable. While some funds reduced direct ETH exposure through ETFs, large asset managers appear comfortable gaining exposure indirectly through equity vehicles like BitMine.
For institutions that prefer regulated equity structures over direct token custody, BMNR offers a levered proxy. It packages Ethereum exposure inside a public company wrapper, complete with traditional reporting and corporate governance.
That structure can matter for mandates that limit direct crypto ownership.
At first glance, the trade looks counterintuitive. Ethereum is in a downtrend. ETF flows are mixed at best. Volatility remains elevated.
But the bull case rests on a few pillars.
First, long term fundamentals. Ethereum still anchors decentralized finance, stablecoin issuance, and a growing tokenization ecosystem. Institutional advocates argue that the network’s utility has not disappeared simply because price momentum has faded.
Second, balance sheet leverage. BitMine’s growing ETH treasury creates a scenario where equity performance can amplify moves in the underlying asset. For investors who believe ETH eventually reclaims higher levels, BMNR can offer outsized upside.
Third, cycle dynamics. Crypto markets have a history of brutal drawdowns followed by sharp recoveries. Accumulating during periods of pessimism has historically rewarded patient capital, even if timing the bottom is nearly impossible.
Investors are clearly looking past the next few quarters and thinking long term on Ethereum.
There is a clear split in the market right now.
Short term traders are reacting to chart levels, macro uncertainty, and ETF flow data. Long term allocators appear to be focusing on strategic positioning.
The continued accumulation of BitMine shares by names like Ark Invest and BlackRock suggests that institutional conviction in Ethereum infrastructure has not broken, even if spot prices have.
That does not guarantee a rebound. Ethereum could test lower levels before sentiment turns. Volatility is part of the asset class.
But the steady bid under BitMine tells its own story.
Even in a downtrend, capital is being deployed...with intent.
For now, Ethereum may be drifting lower. BitMine buyers, however, are still stepping in and definitely betting on Ethereum for the long haul.


U.S. spot crypto ETFs have now crossed $2 trillion in cumulative trading volume, and the pace is what stands out. The second trillion arrived in a fraction of the time it took to reach the first, a sign that these products are no longer just a post launch curiosity. They’ve become part of the daily machinery of crypto markets.
This milestone is about usage, not hype. Cumulative volume counts every trade that’s taken place since launch. It’s not a measure of how much money investors have parked in these funds, and it’s not a scorecard for inflows. It simply answers one question: how often are people actually using these ETFs to trade crypto exposure?
The answer now is: a lot.
Most of that $2 trillion comes from spot Bitcoin ETFs, which have been trading heavily all year. Bitcoin products built liquidity early and never really gave it back. By the end of 2025, they were doing massive daily volume even on relatively quiet market days.
Ethereum ETFs came later, but once they found their footing, they added a meaningful second leg. As ETH products matured, traders began using them not just for long term exposure, but also for positioning, rotation, and relative value trades against Bitcoin.
Together, they pushed cumulative volume past the $2 trillion mark, and the curve got steeper along the way.
A few things changed over the past year.
First, the plumbing improved. Market makers figured out how to price these products efficiently, spreads tightened, and trading got easier. Once friction drops, volume usually follows.
Second, volatility helped. Crypto spent much of the year moving between risk on and risk off. In those environments, ETFs are an easy switch. They let traders adjust exposure fast without dealing with custody, exchanges, or operational headaches.
Third, liquidity concentrated. A handful of ETFs became clear winners, and traders gravitate to the deepest pools. That concentration pulls even more activity into the same tickers, reinforcing the trend.
And finally, these ETFs stopped feeling “new.” Once something becomes familiar, it starts getting used more casually, for hedges, reallocations, and short term trades that don’t make headlines.
It’s important to separate volume from inflows.
Yes, spot crypto ETFs have pulled in tens of billions in new capital since launch, especially on the Bitcoin side. That shows real demand for regulated crypto exposure. But volume tells a different story. It shows repetition. The same capital moving in and out, sometimes many times over.
That’s actually what makes this milestone interesting. It suggests ETFs are becoming the default execution venue for a growing slice of crypto trading, not just a one way funnel for long term investors.
As trading volume piles up, ETFs start to matter more for price formation. On active days, price moves often show up in ETFs first, then ripple into futures and spot markets as arbitrage kicks in.
That doesn’t mean ETFs control crypto prices, but it does mean they’re part of the feedback loop now. For traditional investors especially, the ETF ticker is the market.
This also nudges crypto a bit closer to traditional market behavior. Flows, positioning, and narrative cycles start to matter more, sometimes even more than onchain activity in the short term.
Crossing $2 trillion doesn’t mean volume will grow in a straight line forever. Trading activity can cool when volatility drops or when investors get more comfortable holding through cycles.
But a few things will signal whether this trend sticks:
steady daily volume, not just spikes
broader participation beyond one or two dominant funds
continued activity in Ethereum ETFs, not just Bitcoin
how ETFs behave during the next real market stress test
For now, the takeaway is simple. Spot crypto ETFs aren’t an experiment anymore. They’re being used, heavily, and the market is treating them like infrastructure. That $2 trillion figure isn’t just a big number. It’s a sign that crypto trading has quietly picked up a new center of gravity.
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