Key Takeaways
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- Listed miners are massively outperforming Bitcoin as they pivot to hybrid AI/HPC data-center models; a miner ETF is up >150% YTD while BTC is up ~14% YTD.
- Investors now value miners primarily for AI/HPC opportunities, not hashrate growth; revenue per megawatt and EBITDA margins run far higher in AI colocation than in BTC mining.
- Signature moves: Cipher’s 10-year ~$3B AI colocation deal with Fluidstack (with warrants), IREN’s $1B convertible notes, TeraWulf’s planned $3.2B secured notes for Lake Mariner expansion, and Bitdeer’s conversion of major sites (e.g., 570MW Clarington, OH) with a best-case ~$2B annualized revenue by end-2026.
- Post-halving economics (3.125 BTC/block), record-low hashprice, and rising difficulty are pushing capacity from mining to AI, with Riot, IREN, and Bitfarms signaling near-term hashrate expansion pauses.
What happened?
Shares of large-scale Bitcoin miners are outpacing BTC as the business model shifts from pure mining to broader compute infrastructure. The sector, once tightly beta-linked to Bitcoin’s price, is being rerated as operators sign long-duration AI/HPC colocation contracts, tap capital markets for data-center expansion, and reallocate power capacity away from marginal mining returns. Transactions like Cipher–Fluidstack crystallize the new economics and blur the lines between crypto mining and cloud-adjacent compute services. Meanwhile, the halving, tougher network math, and softer on-chain fees have pressured mining unit economics, accelerating the pivot.
Why it matters
For equity holders, the thesis is migrating from commodity-exposed hashrate growth to power/land/permits plus operational excellence in high-density compute—assets with multi-year visibility, higher MW yields, and better margins. This rerating can compress correlation to BTC while elevating sensitivity to data-center seculars: AI demand, power procurement, interconnect, and capex execution. For Bitcoin itself, miners’ power reallocation could slow hashrate growth at the margin, influence security economics, and modestly increase sensitivity of hashprice to spot price and fees. Capital markets are rewarding credible AI buildouts with higher multiples, but execution risk rises: grid interconnect timelines, transformer/ASIC/GPU supply, long-term PPAs, and contract counterparty quality will determine durability.
What’s next?
Watch the mix shift in MW allocation between mining and AI/HPC, the cadence and terms of long-dated colocation contracts, and financing structures (convertibles, secured notes) tied to specific campus expansions. Monitor hashprice, network difficulty, and miner treasury behavior for signals of mining economics stress. Key catalysts include power procurement wins, substation build milestones, GPU supply deliveries, and occupancy ramps at converted sites. A sustained AI demand wave with constrained power could further advantage miners with cheap baseload, strong interconnects, and modular capacity; if AI demand cools or power costs spike, the pivot’s margin advantage narrows, re-linking these equities to BTC cycles.















