Mechanism Capital co-founder Andrew Kang escalated his critique of Tom Lee’s newest Ethereum funding case with an unusually blunt tirade on X, interlacing his rebuttal with a collection of sharply worded assertions and data-driven claims. “Tom Lee’s ETH thesis is without doubt one of the most retarded mixtures of financially illiterate arguments I’ve seen from a well-known analyst shortly,” Kang wrote, earlier than itemizing 5 pillars he says underpin Lee’s view: “(1) Stablecoin & RWA adoption; (2) Digital oil comparability; (3) Establishments will purchase and stake ETH; (4) ETH might be equal to all monetary infrastructure firms; (5) Technical evaluation.”
Is Tom Lee’s Ethereum Thesis Retarded?
Kang’s central assault targets the concept that rising tokenization and stablecoin exercise ought to translate into outsized charge seize for Ethereum. “Since 2020, tokenized asset worth and stablecoin transaction volumes have elevated 100–1000x… [but] charges are virtually on the identical degree as in 2020,” he argued. He attributed the disconnect to “Ethereum community upgrades making tx’s extra environment friendly,” exercise shifting “to different chains,” and the truth that “tokenizing low-velocity property doesn’t drive a lot charges.” He distilled the purpose with a stark comparability: “Somebody may tokenize a $100m bond and if it trades as soon as each 2 years… A single USDT would generate extra charges.”
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The Mechanism Capital associate pushed the aggressive angle additional. “Many of the charges might be captured by different blockchains with stronger enterprise improvement groups,” he wrote, naming “Solana, Arbitrum, and Tempo” as seeing “a lot of the early huge wins,” and including that “Tether is supporting two new Tether chains, Plasma and Secure,” explicitly supposed to route USDT quantity to Tether-controlled rails.
Kang additionally dismissed Lee’s “digital oil” framing as analytically hole. “Oil is a commodity… actual oil costs adjusted for inflation have been buying and selling in the identical vary for over a century with periodic spikes that revert… I agree ETH could possibly be seen as a commodity, however that’s not bullish,” he wrote.
He prolonged the vary analogy on to Ether’s chart: “Taking a look at this chart objectively, the strongest statement is that Ethereum is in a multi-year vary… we not too long ago tapped the high quality, failing to interrupt resistance… I’d not low cost the potential for a for much longer $1,000–$4,800 vary.” On relative efficiency, he added: “Lengthy-term ETH/BTC is certainly in a multi-year vary, however the previous couple of years have principally been dictated by a downtrend… The ethereum narrative is saturated and fundamentals don’t justify valuation progress.”
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On establishments, Kang argued that Lee’s premise—that banks and enormous corporates will accumulate and stake ETH to safe tokenization networks or as working capital—misunderstands treasury habits and worth accrual. “Have massive banks… purchased ETH on their steadiness sheet but? No. Have any of them introduced plans to? Additionally no… Do banks replenish on barrels of gasoline as a result of they regularly pay for power? No… Do banks purchase shares of asset custodians they use? No,” he wrote, calling the concept that staking demand from incumbents would underpin valuation a class error.
Kang’s thread culminated in a withering evaluation of Ethereum’s pricing dynamics: “Ethereum’s valuation comes primarily from monetary illiteracy… [which] can create a decently massive market cap… However the valuation that may be derived from monetary illiteracy shouldn’t be infinite… Except there may be main organizational change it’s probably destined to indefinite underperformance.”
Lee’s newest outlook, against this, has emphasised Ethereum’s suitability for Wall Road tokenization and its position as a “impartial chain,” with public targets clustered round $10,000–$12,000 by end-2025 and as much as $62,500 in a positive super-cycle.
At publication time, ETH traded close to $4,000.

Featured picture created with DALL.E, chart from TradingView.com