Peter Thiel dumps all ETH treasury shares after “Ethereum’s MicroStrategy” fell 95% since August



Peter Thiel went to zero in ETHZilla, and the ETH treasury company trade just got a lot more real

On Feb. 17, an amended 13G/A posted to ETHZilla’s investor site listed Peter Thiel and Founders Fund-related vehicles at zero shares and 0.0% beneficial ownership.

The filing also stamped a “date of event” of Dec. 31, 2025, which sets the timing frame for what the document captures, a beneficial ownership snapshot that arrives on a compliance clock.

Bloomberg is reporting that Thiel and his Founders Fund have, in fact, fully exited the company, completing a simple arc that has been building for months.

Back in August 2025, the Palantir founder was a significant stakeholder. A Schedule 13D filing reported 11,592,241 shares and 7.5% beneficial ownership, with an event date of Aug. 4. The position then shrank. An amendment filed Nov. 14, reported 928,389 shares and 5.6% as of Sept. 30.

That sequence becomes more compelling when you remember what ETHZilla set out to represent: a public-market attempt to bottle the Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) playbook and pour it over Ethereum, with a Nasdaq ticker and a treasury story aimed at investors who prefer brokerages to wallets.

The filing that turns the rumor into a number

The Feb. 17 amendment is the crispest version of “fully exited” that public markets ever hand you, but it seems the shareholders had already priced this in after Thiel’s 2025 sales. Since August last year, ETHZ shares have declined by 95%, from around $74 to just over $3.50.

The company was clearly under pressure from more than insider selling. In a Jan. 2026 8-K, ETHZilla reported selling 3,965.83 ETH for $12.58 million at an average price of $3,173.67, and it disclosed a remaining balance of roughly 65,850 ETH. A month earlier, there was a much larger sale, about $74.5 million in ETH, tied to debt pressure and a step back from the pure treasury posture.

In a Feb. 2026 8-K, the company disclosed it redeemed all outstanding senior secured convertible notes, paying $516.148 million in principal and $87.745 million as a redemption premium, plus interest.

That is the sound of expensive capital in a market that has started pricing treasury-company structures with less patience.

All of this lands inside a wider story that has been forming across the category.

Crypto-treasury firms have been leaning on buybacks and leverage as equity prices sag, and that broader context gives Thiel’s “0.0%” a different kind of gravity.

The macro problem, carry looks thin and financing looks costly

A treasury strategy always ends up living inside the macro. In the easy phase of this trade, the equity trades at a premium to the underlying crypto, financing becomes the fuel, and the loop feeds itself. ETH has an extra layer here, because staking yield and derivatives carry become inputs in the spreadsheet.

Right now, those inputs read as modest cushions.

Public dashboards tracking ETH futures basis show annualized carry in the low single digits across maturities. Staking yield benchmarks sit in the same neighborhood, with one index around 2.8% annualized.

When the carry is thin, management decisions matter more. ETH sales matter more. Debt terms matter more. Equity issuance terms matter more. And the market starts treating the ticker as a judgment on execution rather than a simple proxy.

Treasury-company trades ultimately rest on the belief that a public wrapper can hold a volatile asset and remain stable when the market shifts. Thiel’s exit does not explain the why, yet it does plant a flag at the end of a timeline.

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