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Bitcoin miners start funding pivot to AI with debt while selling BTC to stay liquid

Bitcoin miners’ identity is fracturing on four fronts simultaneously: crushed margins, accelerating AI pivots, expanding debt loads, and a treasury sell discipline that no longer holds.

CoinShares’ latest mining report shows public miners’ weighted-average cash cost was roughly $79,995 per BTC in the fourth quarter of 2025. The hash price fell to approximately $36-$38 per PH/s/day in the same quarter, then dropped further to around $29 in the first quarter of 2026.

The network logged three consecutive negative difficulty adjustments, the first such streak since July 2022. The live hash price currently sits around $32.36/PH/day, with fees at just 0.40% of block rewards, and the six-month forward market average hash price is near $30.42.

What miners do under those conditions is where the market structure case begins.

Public mining companies collectively hold 121,516 BTC, worth approximately $8.63 billion, making them meaningful marginal sellers, even after losing their status as the dominant public-company treasury class.

Several have already moved from holding to selling. MARA changed its strategy in 2025 to permit sales of Bitcoin from operations and expanded that in 2026 to include balance sheet BTC.

Riot Platforms sold 1,818 BTC in December 2025 for $161.6 million, Core Scientific sold just over 1,900 BTC in January 2026 for about $175 million, and now holds under 1,000 BTC.

Riot separately funded a 200-acre land purchase at Rockdale entirely by selling roughly 1,080 BTC from its balance sheet.

That behavior runs counter to a persistent retail assumption that miners hold by default and that large miner treasury balances are structurally bullish.

When margins break, miners act like commodity producers managing liquidity, and Treasury policy becomes pro-cyclical, with selling concentrated precisely when BTC is already weak.

A line chart tracks Bitcoin hash price falling from roughly $36–$38 in Q4 2025 to $29 in Q1 2026, annotating three major miner treasury sales alongside a weighted-average cash cost of $79,995 per BTC.

The identity split

The fracture described by CoinShares runs deepest through the AI pivot.

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The firm says listed miners could derive up to 70% of their revenues from AI by the end of 2026, up from roughly 30% today.

Core Scientific has energized about 350 MW for CoreWeave and targets roughly 590 MW by early 2027. Its revenue in the fourth quarter of 2025 already showed $42.2 million from self-mining, versus $31.3 million from colocation.

Hut 8 signed a 15-year, 245 MW AI data center lease with a $7 billion base-term value. IREN reported $17.3 million in AI Cloud Services revenue, secured $3.6 billion of GPU financing tied to a Microsoft contract, and guides investors toward a $3.4 billion ARR target by end-2026.

TeraWulf says it has signed more than $12.8 billion in long-term customer contracts and completed $6.5 billion in long-term financings in 2025. Riot signed its first AMD data-center lease.

For equity investors, that redefines what a miner stock actually represents. Buying a listed miner now bundles exposure to BTC price, hyperscaler demand, lease execution timelines, retrofit capital expenditure, financing costs, and counterparty quality.

CoinShares described this explicitly as a bifurcation, with AI/HPC-linked names earning valuation premiums over pure-play miners. The stocks share the same ticker symbols, while the underlying businesses have shifted their centers of gravity.

Company Mining business signal AI/HPC signal Debt / financing signal What the stock increasingly represents
Core Scientific $42.2M self-mining revenue $31.3M colocation revenue; 350 MW energized; 590 MW target Expanded financing facility Hybrid mining + data-center execution
Hut 8 Still mines BTC 245 MW, 15-year AI lease Large long-term infrastructure exposure Power + digital infrastructure platform
IREN Mining remains meaningful $17.3M AI cloud revenue; $3.4B ARR target ~$3.7B convertible notes Levered AI + mining hybrid
TeraWulf Mining still present $12.8B customer contracts Heavy financing and debt AI landlord with mining residual
Riot Mining-led brand AMD data-center lease Treasury monetization + expansion capex BTC exposure plus data-center optionality
Cipher Mining operator HPC diversification under development Multi-billion secured notes Leverage-heavy transition story
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Debt load amplifies that divergence. IREN carries nearly $3.7 billion of convertible notes payable as of Dec. 31, 2025. TeraWulf’s balance sheet shows roughly $46.3 million in current long-term debt, $489.8 million in short-term convertibles, $3.05 billion in long-term debt, and $1.58 billion in convertible notes.

Core Scientific expanded its strategic financing facility to $1 billion. Cipher disclosed $3.73 billion in recent senior secured note financing.

Businesses built around those balance sheets care about rates, refinancing windows, build-cost inflation, and customer concentration in ways that pure Bitcoin miners never had to.

Meanwhile, network hashrate runs at roughly 961 EH/s, a figure the Luxor data puts in sharper context.

Fleets running at 25–38 J/TH were earning about $42/MWh in implied revenue against an estimated network-average power cost of $50/MWh, leaving S19-class hardware in negative gross-margin territory throughout February.

Luxor also documented a 252 EH/s weather-driven offline episode, showing how quickly marginal fleets disappear when economics tighten.

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