While ETH trades near $3K, major players like Consensys and Galaxy Digital may have already cashed out at six times the price — here’s how.
Ethereum may still be trading under $3,000 on public markets, but a group of crypto insiders has already managed to effectively sell their ETH at $16,696 per coin. The key players? Consensys, Galaxy Digital, Electric Capital, and Parafi. And the method? A creative equity pivot involving Sharplink Gaming — a strategy unpacked first by TokenBestNews, which connected the dots behind the scenes.
On May 27, 2024, these Ethereum-aligned institutions participated in a $425M private placement, acquiring 69.1 million shares of Sharplink Gaming at $6.15 per share. Crucially, the investment was funded by OTC sales of Ethereum at roughly $2,646.
Today, those shares trade around $39, implying that each ETH exchanged is now worth $16,696 — a 6.3x increase, achieved without touching retail exchanges or triggering token dumps.
The full strategy was dissected by TokenBestNews, revealing a level of financial coordination that most retail investors never saw coming.
The blueprint is eerily similar to Michael Saylor’s MicroStrategy-Bitcoin play: buy the asset, embed it into a public company’s balance sheet, and let stock market optics do the rest.
Sharplink Gaming is now being dubbed “Ethereum’s MicroStrategy,” as it quietly positions itself as a proxy vehicle for ETH exposure — and the market has responded.
Here’s how it unfolded:
- Raise $425 million from ETH whales.
- Sell ETH OTC to avoid crashing the price on exchanges.
- Buy a majority stake in a relatively unknown public company (Sharplink).
- Declare an Ethereum treasury strategy, sparking interest.
- Let speculation reprice the equity, effectively boosting the perceived value of ETH.
This wasn’t about waiting for ETH to climb organically. It was about crafting a financial wrapper that priced ETH higher through traditional equities.
“Valuation in public markets is based on belief — and belief can be engineered.” — Anonymous VC
And this time, belief turned each ETH into six figures of equity exposure.
Ironically, while on-chain data shows every ETH move, the real strategy unfolded in corporate filings, stock placements, and Nasdaq mechanics — areas where crypto-native users rarely look.
For instance, Joseph Lubin (founder of Consensys) is believed to hold large amounts of ETH from the 2015 ICO. Through this strategy, such dormant tokens could be turned into inflated, publicly tradable equity, free from price impact.
As retail investors noticed the Sharplink rally, speculation spiked. Will others follow suit?
- Will we see Polkadot, Avalanche, or even BSV trying to pull similar moves?
- Could low-float stocks become the new DeFi derivatives?
The risk of copycat strategies is real — and could define the next bull market narrative.
Let’s be clear: this isn’t DeFi. It’s financial theater, performed on the Nasdaq stage. But it’s clever, and it worked.
The full story, along with on-chain data and timeline breakdowns, is available on TokenBestNews, which was among the first to document how ETH was effectively sold at $16,696 — without ever reaching that price on Coinbase or Binance.
As George Soros once said:
“When I see a bubble forming, I rush in to buy more.”
Whether this becomes a template or a one-off, one thing is clear: Ethereum’s valuation now lives in more than one market — and some players know how to extract the maximum value from both.