Ethereum treasury company BitMine Immersion Technologies scooped up $97.6 million worth of Ether on Tuesday as the crypto market remains muted in the final days of 2025.
Nansen shows BitMine purchased 32,938 Ether (). Other shows its total holdings are now 4.07 million ETH, worth $12 billion.
BitMine also staked another 118,944 ETH, continuing its strategy to earn passive returns for shareholders.
BitMine’s latest buying spree comes amid a broader crypto market compression, which Tom Lee, the orchestrator of BitMine’s Ethereum strategy, was partly due to an uptick in tax-loss selling in the US:
“Year-end tax-loss related selling is pushing down crypto and crypto equity prices and this effect tends to be the greatest from 12/26 to 12/30, so we are navigating markets with this in mind.”
More tax-loss selling typically happens toward the end of December as individuals and institutions offload assets to offset profits and lower their for the year.
Lee, a founder and managing partner of Fundstrat, said crypto prices have also been affected by institutional investors taking a break during the as it leaves bots to dominate
The selling pressure has stalled upward price movement, with the crypto total market cap having now hovered around the $3 trillion mark for the past two weeks, CoinGecko shows.

BitMine’s ETH buying activity hasn’t slowed
Despite the market slump, BitMine has more than 77,400 ETH since last Monday, widening its lead over competitors and becoming what Lee calls the largest “fresh money” buyer of ETH.
Related:
BitMine has now purchased more than 40,000 ETH each week for at least 10 consecutive weeks.

Proposed California wealth tax stirs controversy
It comes as several crypto leaders slammed a on billionaires earlier this week, with opponents arguing it could trigger an and capital out of the tech-savvy state.
“I promise you this will be the final straw. Billionaires will take with them all of their spending, hobbies, philanthropy and jobs,” former Kraken CEO Jesse Powell said.
The proposal includes taxes on unrealized gains.
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