BitMine Immersion Technologies plans to offer 3 million shares of 9.50% Series A Perpetual Preferred Stock, adding a new capital markets instrument to support its Ethereum-focused treasury and staking strategy. The proposed public offering remains subject to market and other conditions, and the company has applied to list the preferred shares on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker BMNP.
The preferred stock carries a stated amount and initial liquidation preference of $100 per share, implying a potential gross offering size of $300 million if all 3 million shares are sold at stated value. Dividends will accrue at a fixed annual rate of 9.50% and are expected to be payable in cash weekly in arrears, when declared by BitMine’s board and when legally available.
The weekly dividend structure is unusual for a public preferred stock and may appeal to income-focused investors seeking frequent cash distributions. However, it also creates a regular funding obligation for BitMine. If dividends are not paid on schedule, unpaid amounts would compound weekly under a formula that can increase the dividend rate up to a maximum of 15% per year.
BitMine said proceeds may be used for general corporate purposes, including the acquisition of additional ETH and other digital assets, expansion of staking and validator infrastructure, working capital, strategic investments aligned with the Ethereum ecosystem and potential common stock repurchases. Moelis & Company and Cantor are acting as joint lead bookrunners for the offering.
A new financing layer for crypto treasuries
The proposed preferred stock gives BitMine a way to raise capital without immediately issuing common equity or taking on conventional debt with a fixed maturity date. Perpetual preferred shares sit between debt and common equity in a company’s capital structure. They typically provide investors with a fixed dividend and liquidation preference while giving the issuer more flexibility than a traditional bond.
That flexibility comes with a significant cost. A 9.50% fixed dividend is a high recurring cash obligation, especially for a company whose strategy is tied to volatile digital assets. If the full $300 million offering is completed at stated value, the annual dividend burden would be approximately $28.5 million before any compounding on unpaid dividends. That obligation will be measured against BitMine’s liquidity, asset performance, operating cash flow and any income generated from staking activities.
The redemption terms give BitMine additional optionality. The company may redeem the preferred stock at 110% of stated amount during the first 18 months, 105% between 18 months and three years, and 100% after three years, plus accumulated and unpaid dividends. Holders would also have repurchase rights if a fundamental change occurs.
Ethereum strategy faces investor test
The offering comes as public companies are increasingly adapting the digital asset treasury model beyond Bitcoin. BitMine’s stated use of proceeds highlights Ethereum accumulation, staking and validator infrastructure as central elements of its strategy. That makes the company’s balance sheet sensitive not only to ETH price movements, but also to staking yields, validator performance, network economics and regulatory treatment of staking activity.
For investors, the preferred stock creates a different risk profile from BitMine’s common shares. Preferred holders would rank ahead of common shareholders for dividends and liquidation preference, but they would still be exposed to issuer credit risk and the volatility of the company’s underlying digital asset strategy. The shares have no conventional maturity and no conversion rights, meaning investors are primarily underwriting dividend durability and capital preservation rather than direct upside in common equity.
The broader implication is that crypto treasury companies are becoming more sophisticated in how they access capital. Instead of relying only on common stock issuance, convertible debt or asset appreciation, companies are testing preferred securities designed to attract yield-oriented investors. That could broaden the investor base, but it also increases scrutiny around leverage, liquidity and asset-liability matching.
BitMine’s offering will be watched as a test of demand for high-yield preferred stock tied to an Ethereum treasury strategy. If successful, it could provide fresh capital for ETH purchases and staking expansion. If ETH volatility rises or market conditions weaken, the fixed dividend obligation may become a more important concern for both shareholders and credit-oriented investors.