Just nine months ago, The Ether Machine looked like one of the most exciting institutional Ethereum plays to ever be put to market. The company, co-founded by former ConsenSys executives Andrew Keys and David Merin, had announced a $1.6 billion SPAC merger with Dynamix Corporation that would have listed the first major Ethereum treasury and yield vehicle on Nasdaq under the ticker ETHM. It had secured $654 million in a private financing round, drew backing from Pantera Capital, Kraken, and Blockchain.com, and was designed to hold more than 400,000 ETH from day one, generating returns through staking and decentralised finance strategies. The deal was described at announcement as the largest PIPE financing in crypto since 2021. On April 8, 2026, it was terminated. Both parties cited unfavourable market conditions. The Ether Machine remains private, holding over 496,000 ETH worth more than $1.1 billion, and the company now faces an uncertain path to the public markets it had been targeting for nearly a year.
What the Deal Was and Why It Mattered
Ether Machine first announced plans to launch what it described as the largest yield-bearing ETH fund aimed at institutional investors in July 2025. The company, co-founded by former ConsenSys executives Andrew Keys and David Merin, said it would list on Nasdaq under the ticker ETHM, launching with more than 400,000 ETH worth over $1.5 billion at the time under management. In September, Ether Machine secured $654 million in a private financing round, including 150,000 ETH from Ethereum advocate Jeffrey Berns, who also joined the company’s board.
The structure was designed as Ethereum’s answer to Strategy, the Bitcoin treasury company formerly known as MicroStrategy whose playbook of accumulating a single digital asset on a public company balance sheet spawned an entire generation of corporate crypto treasury vehicles. Where Strategy accumulates Bitcoin, The Ether Machine would accumulate ETH and generate additional yield through staking, offering institutional investors exposure to Ethereum’s proof-of-stake returns through a regulated, publicly listed vehicle.
The agreement, first unveiled in July 2025, aimed to take the ETH treasury firm public on Nasdaq under the ticker ETHM. The company is designed to act as an Ethereum treasury and yield vehicle, generating returns through staking and decentralised finance strategies while holding large reserves of ether. Had it completed, the listing would have created the first major publicly traded Ethereum-specific treasury company in the United States, opening ETH yield exposure to the brokerage accounts of millions of retail and institutional investors who do not or cannot hold crypto directly.
Why the Deal Collapsed
The $1.6 billion SPAC merger between Dynamix Corporation and The Ether Machine was terminated due to unfavourable market conditions. Dynamix will receive a $50 million termination payment as the agreement unwinds.
The digital asset treasury trade, which exploded in popularity through 2024 and most of 2025 as companies raced to copy Strategy’s Bitcoin playbook, has cooled sharply this year. ETH has struggled to hold momentum, and several copycat treasury vehicles have watched their mNAV premiums collapse to par or even below, making fresh PIPE raises a brutal sell.
The timing is significant. Asset prices have declined sharply since October, and Q1 2026 has added further pressure. While geopolitical tensions briefly lifted Ethereum, the token still remains nearly 55% below its all-time high set in August 2025. The impact is not limited to The Ether Machine. BitMine, the largest corporate ETH holder, is sitting on roughly $6.5 billion in unrealised losses, with its stock down 31.7% year to date.
Trend Research has fully unwound its Ethereum position, selling 651,757 ETH worth about $1.34 billion while locking in an estimated $747 million loss. Separately, ETHZilla, formerly a biotech firm that pivoted into an Ethereum treasury strategy during the 2025 hype, has also moved away from ETH accumulation, updating its corporate name and brand to Forum Markets. These are not isolated retreats. They form a pattern of institutional retrenchment from the ETH treasury model that the collapse of The Ether Machine’s SPAC deal now punctuates with particular force.
What Happens to Dynamix and The Ether Machine
The $1.6 billion SPAC merger between Ethereum treasury company The Ether Machine and blank-check firm Dynamix has been formally terminated, according to an SEC filing dated April 8, 2026. The deal’s collapse leaves Dynamix with a $50 million breakup payment and roughly seven months to find a new acquisition target before it must liquidate.
Dynamix now has until November 22, 2026, to lock in a new business combination. If it cannot, the SPAC will wind down, redeem its public shares from the trust account, and dissolve. For Dynamix shareholders who bought into the SPAC on the back of the Ether Machine announcement, the collapse is a significant setback. They now hold paper in a blank-check company hunting for a new target with a compressed timeline and a shrinking pool of attractive crypto acquisition candidates.
For The Ether Machine itself, it is stated that public offering plans may be postponed to another period or different methods may be evaluated. The company still holds a substantial ETH treasury of nearly 500,000 ETH and continues to generate staking yield. Its business model has not changed, but its path to public markets has been set back by months at minimum and potentially much longer if ETH market conditions do not improve materially.
The Broader ETH Treasury Picture
The Ether Machine’s collapse does not mean the ETH treasury thesis is dead. Currently, 10 Ethereum treasury firms collectively control more than 6 million ETH, representing a combined value approaching $14 billion. The sector leader is Tom Lee’s Bitmine, which recently achieved uplisting to the New York Stock Exchange and simultaneously expanded its share buyback programme from $1 billion to $4 billion.
What it does mean is that the easy money phase of the ETH treasury trade is over. The companies that survive the current correction will be those with genuine yield generation, manageable leverage, and a realistic path to institutional capital flows that does not depend on speculative mNAV premiums. Strategy succeeded with Bitcoin in part because it moved early, before the playbook was crowded, and because Bitcoin’s lack of native yield made the treasury model structurally distinct from simply buying a Bitcoin ETF. For ETH, the pitch is more complex. Staking yields add a dimension Bitcoin cannot offer, but the institutional infrastructure for staked ETH custody and compliance is still maturing, and the market conditions of 2026 have exposed how thin the margin for error was always going to be.
This marks the second high-profile crypto SPAC unwind in recent months and a sharp reminder that the treasury company gold rush is no longer the easy bid it was last cycle. Whether The Ether Machine attempts a traditional IPO or a direct listing once conditions improve remains to be seen. For now, one of Ethereum’s most ambitious institutional vehicles has stepped back from the public markets it was built to enter, leaving $1.1 billion in ETH on a private balance sheet and a $50 million breakup fee as the only tangible outcome of nine months of planning.
















