Bitmine Immersion Technologies is making a big Ethereum bet at a rough moment for the asset, unveiling a $300 million preferred stock issuance built around a fixed 9.5% annual dividend. The Bitmine preferred stock issuance mirrors a financing playbook Strategy made famous with Bitcoin, and it comes just as ETH prices are testing new lows.
The offering, disclosed in a Wednesday SEC filing, includes 3 million shares of Series A Perpetual Preferred Stock priced at $100 each. If approved, the shares will list on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker BMNP, with trading expected to begin within 30 days of issuance. Moelis & Company and Cantor Fitzgerald are acting as joint lead bookrunners.
The structure is straightforward for income-focused investors. Each share pays $9.50 annually, which equals a fixed 9.5% yield, and the dividend will be distributed weekly rather than quarterly. Bitmine plans to fund those payments with income generated from staking its Ethereum reserves, so the dividend depends directly on the company’s crypto operations.
Preferred equity sits between common stock and fixed-income securities. Holders receive steady distributions without depending entirely on price appreciation. In practice, that hybrid appeal has helped make this kind of 9.5% dividend preferred shares structure more familiar in crypto corporate finance.
The NYSE listing under BMNP is still subject to regulatory approval. Even so, Bitmine expects trading to begin within a month of share issuance. Getting a crypto-linked preferred stock onto one of the world’s most prominent exchanges underscores the company’s effort to draw both institutional and retail investors.
The capital raised will not sit idle. Proceeds are earmarked for additional ETH purchases, expanded staking operations through Bitmine’s Made in America Validator Network, and common stock buyback programs. In short, the preferred stock issuance is designed to accelerate every part of Bitmine’s Ethereum accumulation strategy at once.
That combination of buying more ETH, staking it for yield, and using the yield to pay preferred dividends creates a self-reinforcing loop, at least if Ethereum prices hold up. As a result, the financing ties Bitmine’s growth plan even more tightly to the direction of ETH.
The blueprint here is unmistakably Strategy’s. Michael Saylor’s Bitcoin-focused enterprise launched its perpetual preferred offering, STRC, in July 2025. Since then, the instrument has grown to an $8.5 billion market capitalization, making it the world’s largest preferred stock by that measure. Strategy president Phong Le has said that roughly 80% of STRC buyers are individual retail investors, which points to the broad appeal of dividend-bearing crypto-linked shares.
Bitmine’s version is different in one key way. STRC uses a floating dividend rate with monthly adjustments designed to keep it trading near par, while Bitmine is offering a fixed 9.5% yield. That matters to investors comparing the two instruments. A fixed rate provides predictability, but it also means the yield will not adjust upward if interest rates or market conditions change.
Strive, another bitcoin treasury operator, has also entered the same space with its SATA preferred shares. That suggests this financing model is becoming a recognizable category within cryptocurrency corporate finance rather than a one-off idea.
Bitmine’s ETH position is large. The company holds over 5.3 million ETH, or about 4.5% of Ethereum’s entire circulating supply, valued at around $10 billion at current prices. Management has said it reached 90% completion of its internal “Alchemy of 5%” accumulation target in just 11 months.
That is a fast pace. However, the timing also creates a painful picture on paper.
ETH recently touched a 14-month low near $1,734, dropping more than 12% over the prior seven-day period. The asset reached approximately $5,000 in October, meaning Bitmine’s holdings carry an estimated $9 billion unrealized loss at current levels. Bitmine chairman Tom Lee pushed back on that reading on Monday, arguing that ETH valuations do not reflect what he sees as improving fundamentals across the Ethereum network.
The market has not been reassured yet. Bitmine’s common shares fell nearly 6% on Wednesday to $16.90, the lowest price since the company pivoted to an Ethereum treasury model in June 2025.
That matters because the preferred stock issuance is designed to raise fresh capital precisely when Bitmine’s existing asset base is under pressure. So the deal raises a basic question: is the company shoring up its position ahead of a recovery, or doubling down at a vulnerable moment?
This is where the broader preferred stock market tells its own story. Strategy’s STRC traded 5% below its $100 par value on Wednesday, while Strive’s SATA declined to approximately $97. Both instruments were trading below par in the same week that Bitmine launched a new offering in the same category.
The pattern reflects real skepticism about whether crypto-linked companies can sustain dividend commitments through prolonged price downturns. Bitmine’s plan to fund its 9.5% dividend from ETH staking income is coherent in a stable or rising market. In a sustained bear environment for Ethereum, however, that income stream becomes harder to rely on.
Potential BMNP buyers will be weighing that tension closely. A 9.5% fixed yield on a NYSE-listed preferred share looks attractive on paper. Still, the real question is whether the underlying Ethereum strategy can generate enough through staking to keep those weekly payments flowing, especially when peer instruments are already sliding below face value.
Bitmine is essentially asking the market to bet on Ethereum’s recovery at the same time it is asking for $300 million to buy more of it. That is a high-conviction move, and the preferred stock structure spreads that conviction across a new class of investors who may not otherwise have had a seat at the table.
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