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Tom Lee Says Ethereum Will Anchor the Next Global Financial System
Tom Lee says the future of finance is being built on Ethereum, and he’s betting big that tokenization—not nostalgia for four-year bitcoin cycles—will drive the next decade of digital-asset growth.
Fundstrat’s Founder and Bitmine Boss Tom Lee Makes the Case for an Ethereum-Powered Future
Tom Lee, a veteran Wall Street strategist who plays central roles at Fundstrat and Bitmine, joined Farokh Sarmad on Rug Radio for a candid conversation about emerging technologies, the crypto “supercycle,” his family, his early trading years, and why ethereum ( ETH) sits at the center of his long-range thesis.
The discussion ranged from telecom’s 1990s upheaval to his earliest 100x stock calls, ultimately landing on why he believes ethereum ( ETH) is positioned to anchor an entirely new financial architecture. Lee traced his market origins back to Wharton and early equity-research days, where he built a reputation for spotting misunderstood technologies before they crossed the mainstream threshold.
Lee told the Rug Radio host that most of the industry’s original participants have simply aged, not the technology. The future, he argued, lies in the next wave of global users discovering digital assets for the first time. His ETH conviction stems from a structural shift he claims Wall Street has already made. Investors no longer see stablecoins as novelties; they see infrastructure. And now that major financial institutions are tokenizing assets, they’re picking the chain that offers reliability, finality, and a decade-long operational track record.
They’re not building on “an experimental chain or a newly launched L1,” he noted. Even if alternative chains continue to innovate, Lee believes Ethereum’s network effects and uptime record make it the institutional default. He emphasized that ethereum’s value today reflects a discounted version of a vastly larger future market. Tokenizing dollars was only step one; the next frontier includes equities, bonds, real estate, intellectual property, and more—markets measured not in trillions but in quadrillions.
In that world, Ethereum’s role as a global settlement layer becomes obvious. Ethereum at $3,000 or $5,000 is just the starting point, he suggested, noting long-term models that place ETH’s potential value far higher when benchmarked against bitcoin or global financial infrastructure. Lee also addressed the volatility narrative with a shrug. For him, price swings reflect opportunity—not dysfunction.
Bitmine, which now holds close to 4% of all ETH and maintains substantial cash reserves alongside an in-house staking architecture, continues accumulating even during market drawdowns. “It’s easier to buy ETH at $3,000 than $30,000,” he joked, reaffirming Bitmine’s stance that ethereum has already set its bottom this cycle.
He added:
He pushed back on the idea that digital-asset treasuries (DATs) distort markets. While 80 DATs emerged in 2025, he noted that only two—Bitmine and Strategy—command meaningful liquidity. The rest, he said, illustrate a classic market lesson: investors gravitate toward the strongest players, not the cheapest.
Read more: Michael Saylor Says Bitcoin Will Power Digital Credit Revolution in the Middle East
Lee also argued that the industry’s fixation on four-year cycles should be retired. The same statistical breakdown that happened in manufacturing and commodities, he said, is now happening in crypto. If bitcoin sets a new high by Jan. 31, he contends, the “cycle” narrative is officially obsolete.
Looking toward 2026, Lee said the year ahead could be one of the strongest yet for digital assets. Tokenization, developer momentum, and institutional participation—not halving nostalgia—will drive the market. He expects L1s to shine, with ethereum anchoring the expansion.
By the end of the interview, one theme dominated: conviction built over decades. Whether in 1990s telecom, early crypto, or today’s tokenization push, Lee’s message remained consistent—big transformations look boring only to people who stop paying attention. The next decade, he argued, won’t be defined by who was early, but by who stayed focused.
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