Strategy and Bitmine are facing a combined paper loss of more than $16 billion after sharp declines in Bitcoin and Ether placed both reported crypto positions below their stated average purchase prices, according to figures circulated in market commentary.
The calculations show Strategy holding 843,706 BTC at an average cost of $75,699, while its position is valued near $56.26 billion under the cited pricing, creating an unrealized loss estimated between $7.25 billion and $7.6 billion.
Bitmine’s reported Ether exposure is listed at 5,416,901 ETH with an average cost of $3,485, while the cited market value stands near $10.03 billion, leaving the position down about $8.74 billion to $8.9 billion on paper.
The figures place Strategy and Bitmine at the center of renewed attention on corporate and institutional crypto balance sheets, where large digital asset holdings can move rapidly with spot market prices.
STRATEGY AND BITMINE DOWN $16 BILLION ON BTC AND ETH
Saylor's Strategy:
– 843,706 $BTC
– $75,699 average BTC cost
– $7.25B unrealized lossTom Lee's Bitmine:
– 5,416,901 $ETH
– $3,485 average ETH cost
– $8.74B unrealized lossThe two world's LARGEST holders of BTC and ETH… pic.twitter.com/QPQnPUOc6j
— Coin Bureau (@coinbureau) June 3, 2026
Both entities have been associated with accumulation strategies that rely on access to capital, long holding periods, and investor confidence through periods when Bitcoin and Ether trade below acquisition costs.
The reported losses remain unrealized because neither position has been described in the cited figures as sold, and paper losses differ from realized losses recorded after disposal of an asset.
Market participants are watching whether the holders continue buying, pause accumulation, or reduce exposure, although available figures in the circulated commentary do not show forced sales or liquidation events.
Bitcoin and Ether volatility has created large mark-to-market swings for entities with concentrated crypto reserves, especially when purchases were made during periods of stronger market pricing. Strategy’s average Bitcoin cost near $75,699 means its position depends heavily on a BTC recovery above that level before the unrealized loss reverses under the stated calculation.
For Bitmine, the $3,485 average Ether cost remains a key benchmark, with recovery requiring a higher ETH price. The drawdown has focused attention on balance sheet resilience, financing terms, and each holder’s ability to manage investor concerns without turning unrealized losses into actual realized losses.
Analysts and traders distinguish long-term treasury strategies from leveraged trades because entities without repayment pressure, redemptions, or collateral triggers can hold volatile assets longer. This distinction is central to Strategy and Bitmine, where debt stress may determine whether market weakness leads to selling.
The latest figures renew focus on shareholder and investor communication, as large unrealized losses can affect confidence while assets remain on balance sheets. Strategy and Bitmine are described as long-term accumulators, not short-term sellers, but the current decline’s pace and duration may test that approach.
Under the supplied market values, the combined paper loss sits above $16 billion, making the BTC and ETH positions a closely watched measure of institutional crypto risk during the latest market weakness. Further updates will depend on verified disclosures, price movements, and any new purchases or sales reported by Strategy, Bitmine, or related publicly available market filings in the periods ahead.
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