Bitcoin Miners Are Becoming AI Companies — and Selling Their BTC to Pay for It

The bitcoin mining industry is going through its biggest identity crisis since the 2020 halving. The numbers tell the story: it now costs an average of $79,995 to mine a single bitcoin, but BTC is trading around $70,000. That’s a $10,000 loss on every coin produced.

So what are miners doing? Pivoting hard into artificial intelligence — and selling their bitcoin reserves to fund it.

The $70 Billion AI Pivot

According to CoinShares’ Q1 2026 mining report, publicly listed miners have announced over $70 billion in cumulative AI and high-performance computing (HPC) contracts. The biggest deals include:

  • CoreWeave × Core Scientific: $10.2 billion over 12 years
  • TeraWulf: $12.8 billion in contracted HPC revenue
  • Hut 8: $7 billion, 15-year AI infrastructure lease
  • Cipher Digital × Fluidstack (Google-backed): Multi-billion-dollar agreement

The industry expects to derive 70% of revenue from AI by end of 2026, up from about 30% today. These are no longer mining companies — they’re becoming data center operators that happen to mine bitcoin on the side.

Why the Math Stopped Working

The economics are brutal. Hash price — the revenue miners earn per unit of computing power — hit a post-halving low of ~$28–$30 per petahash per day in early March. To stay profitable, miners need electricity below $0.05/kWh with mid-generation hardware.

Meanwhile, AI infrastructure offers margins above 85% with multi-year revenue visibility. The cost to build AI infrastructure ($8–$15 million per megawatt) is far higher than mining infrastructure ($700K–$1M per MW), but the returns are vastly more attractive.

Miners Are Selling Bitcoin to Fund the Switch

Public miners have collectively reduced their BTC treasuries by over 15,000 BTC from peak levels:

  • Core Scientific sold ~1,900 BTC ($175M) in January and plans to liquidate substantially all remaining holdings in Q1 2026
  • Bitdeer reduced its treasury to zero in February
  • Riot Platforms sold 1,818 BTC ($162M) in December
  • Marathon Digital (largest public holder at 53,822 BTC) expanded its policy to authorize sales from its entire balance sheet reserve

The sector has also taken on massive debt. IREN carries $3.7 billion in convertible notes. TeraWulf has $5.7 billion in total debt. Cipher Digital’s quarterly interest expense surged from $3.2 million to $33.4 million after issuing $1.7 billion in senior notes.

What This Means for Bitcoin’s Security

Here’s the tension: the companies that secure the bitcoin network are the same ones pulling capital out of mining. The network hashrate peaked at ~1,160 exahashes per second in October 2025 and has since dropped to ~920 EH/s, with three consecutive negative difficulty adjustments — the first such streak since July 2022.

If enough miners exit, bitcoin’s security budget shrinks. That’s a long-term risk for the entire network.

What Investors Should Watch

  • Miners with AI contracts trade at 12.3× next-twelve-month sales vs. 5.9× for pure-play miners. The market is rewarding the pivot.
  • Watch the hashrate. If it keeps declining, it signals more miners are exiting or reallocating.
  • BTC price matters. A sustained move above $80K would make mining profitable again and slow the pivot. Below $65K could accelerate it.
  • AI revenue execution. These companies are taking on infrastructure-scale debt. If AI revenue doesn’t materialize on schedule, there could be defaults.
  • For everyday crypto investors, the message is clear: the bitcoin mining industry is no longer just about bitcoin. It’s becoming an AI infrastructure play — and that changes how you should evaluate these companies.

    Source: CoinShares Q1 2026 Mining Report, CoinDesk, public company filings

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