Phoenix has released a new report on most Ethereum holdings by Institutions. Firms in the technology, gaming and digital asset industry are gradually becoming more exposed to Ethereum, with an estimated cumulative number of 7.16 million ETH worth $13.34 billion as of late February 2026.
This concentration translates to about 5.92 percent of the circulating supply of Ethereum, which means that institutional involvement is not an experiment anymore, but an accepted part of the market structure in the cryptocurrency market.
Corporate Treasuries Lead Accumulation Trend
Among the largest holders are publicly listed companies as well as blockchain-based organizations. Bitmine Immersion Tech is the largest member of the cohort with a value in excess of 4.4 million ETH. The large investment by the company underlines the way certain companies are no longer viewing Ethereum as a long-shot gamble but as an insurance fund linked to decentralized computing and tokenized applications.
SharpLink Gaming has also established a strong presence of over 863,000 ETH, whereas The Ether Machine owns 496,710 ETH worth around $925.90 million.
Ethereum Foundation itself is one of the major holders, holding more than 200,000 ETH to fund the ecosystem, research, and grants. Its further maintenance indicates the further shift of the network towards scalability and infrastructure maturity.
Diversified Participation Across Sectors
In addition to the top tier allocations, there are a number of publicly traded and infrastructure oriented companies with large allocations to Ethereum. Bit Digital owns 154,400 ETH which is worth approximately $287.80 million, whereas Coinbase owns 151,180 ETH which is worth approximately $281.80 million.
Mantle has 101,870 ETH worth approximately $189.90 million and the Golem Foundation has 101,030 ETH worth approximately $188.30 million. Although these are smaller than the top allocations, they serve the purpose of diversification of an institutional base across exchanges, infrastructure providers and decentralized computing platforms.
Ethzilla has 93,790 ETH worth about $174.80 million and BTCS Inc. has 70,030 ETH worth about $130.50 million, making up the list of the largest disclosed organizational reserves.
Strategic Treasury Diversification Drives Adoption
The consistent presence of ETH in such a multitude of institutions is an indication of a change in the diversification policies of treasuries. Organizations are beginning to deploy Ethereum as a store of value, and a productive asset that can earn yield by staking and can participate in decentralized finance.
This development is in line with the general technological maturation of Ethereum. The shift to proof-of-stake of the network, scaling solutions, and the increasing real-world asset tokenization have made the network a base settlement layer of digital finance. Firms investing in ETH today are also likely to be investing in blockchain integration, automation of smart contracts and tokenized financial instruments.
Ethereum’s Expanding Role in Global Finance
The existence of $13.34 billion in Ethereum reserves of the organization is an example of the penetration of blockchain assets into the traditional financial systems. Fiat, equities or commodity-based balance sheets have been replaced with digital assets directly linked to programmable financial infrastructure.
This shift is an indicator of a new hybrid financial system whereby decentralized networks would co-exist with corporate governance and regulated markets. As the infrastructure of most tokenization applications, and numerous smart contract applications, Ethereum is rapidly becoming at the center of that convergence.
Ethereum institutional ownership is expected to be a major metric of the fast rate at which blockchain technology will become integrated into the economy as adoption continues to rise. The existing 7.16 million ETH in the organizations is not only a numeric achievement, but the manifestation of the increased trust in Ethereum as both an asset and platform that would define the future of finance.