An unmarked wallet just purchased $106.98 million in $ETH. Arkham Intelligence flagged the transaction and noted that the purchase pattern matches Bitmine’s prior buying behavior. The question Arkham is asking publicly: Did Tom Lee just buy another $100 million in $ETH?
THIS WHALE JUST BOUGHT $100 MILLION $ETH
— Arkham (@arkham) March 26, 2026
An unmarked address just purchased $106.98M of $ETH. The $ETH purchase pattern matches Bitmine’s prior purchase patterns.
Did Tom Lee just buy $100M of $ETH? pic.twitter.com/PI4V1bY96b
Two days ago, Bitmine’s accumulated $ETH holdings crossed $10 billion after purchasing $140.74 million in a single week. That figure outpaced Michael Saylor’s $75 million Bitcoin purchase over the same period by nearly double. If this latest $107 million transaction belongs to Bitmine, the firm is accelerating rather than pausing after its recent buying spree.
Where Bitmine Stands Right Now
As of two days ago, Bitmine held $10.03 billion in $ETH and had staked $200 million of that, locking it into the Ethereum staking contract for yield. The current ownership level sits at 3.86% of all $ETH in existence.
To reach 4%, Bitmine needs roughly $359 million more. At the pace it has been buying, mid-April was the stated target for crossing that threshold. If the $107 million transaction flagged by Arkham is Bitmine, that timeline just got shorter. A $107 million purchase reduces the remaining gap to around $252 million, which changes the mid-April estimate considerably.
The Pattern Match That Makes This Interesting
Arkham did not confirm that the wallet belongs to Bitmine. What it flagged is that the purchase pattern matches Bitmine’s prior behavior. That’s a specific observation from an intelligence platform that tracks wallet activity across chains and builds behavioral profiles over time.
Bitmine’s buying pattern over recent weeks has been distinctive enough to identify: large single transactions, $ETH purchased directly rather than through complex routing, and timing that clusters around specific windows. An unmarked wallet executing a $107 million $ETH purchase in a way that mirrors that pattern is either Bitmine or someone deliberately copying it, and the latter seems less likely.
The use of an unmarked address is consistent with institutional buyers who want to accumulate without immediately telegraphing their position to the market. Large purchases through identified wallets move prices before execution is complete.
What $ETH’s Price Is Doing
The asset has been consolidating between $1,900 and $2,200 for weeks. Support sits at $1,900 and resistance at $2,150. On the higher timeframe, the price action is forming what looks like a bear flag, a pattern that technical analysts typically read as a continuation setup for a move lower after a period of sideways consolidation.
The tension between that technical picture and the accumulation story is genuine. A bear flag on the higher timeframe says the path of least resistance may be downward. Sustained institutional buying at $107 million per transaction says there is real demand absorbing supply in the current range. These two things can both be true simultaneously, and often are before a resolution in either direction.
A bear flag that resolves to the downside would test the $1,900 support level. A break below $1,900 removes the floor that has held the consolidation pattern together.
On the other side, continued accumulation at this pace, combined with $200 million already locked in staking contracts, puts real pressure on the available liquid supply, which is the mechanism behind any potential squeeze toward the $2,150 resistance.
What Comes Next
The 4% milestone is the number Bitmine has set as its near-term target. Whether the $107 million purchase is confirmed as Bitmine’s or not, the trajectory from $10 billion in holdings at 3.86% to 4% ownership is a defined, measurable path. Every purchase either closes or extends that gap.
The Arkham flag on this transaction keeps the question open until the wallet is identified or Bitmine makes a public disclosure. Tom Lee has been transparent about Bitmine’s $ETH strategy in recent communications. If this is his purchase, a confirmation is likely to follow.
A $107 million $ETH purchase matching Bitmine’s known buying pattern lands two days after Tom Lee outspent Saylor on crypto in a single week. If confirmed, Bitmine’s path to 4% asset ownership just accelerated. The asset is consolidating between $1,900 and $2,200 with a bear flag forming on higher timeframes, but institutional demand at this scale is the kind of variable that technical patterns don’t always account for.