Bitcoin (BTC) Miners Bleed $19K Per Coin, Pivot Hard Toward AI Infrastructure

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Key Takeaways

  • Mining a single Bitcoin cost approximately $80,000 during Q4 2025, creating a ~$19,000 loss per coin with BTC trading near $70,000
  • Public mining companies have secured more than $70 billion in artificial intelligence and high-performance computing deals
  • AI revenue could comprise as much as 70% of miner income by late 2026, up from approximately 30% currently
  • Mining firms are liquidating Bitcoin holdings and accumulating billions in debt to finance their AI infrastructure pivot
  • Network hashrate has declined from 1,160 EH/s to roughly 920 EH/s as operations shut down

The economics of Bitcoin mining have turned upside down. A recent CoinShares analysis reveals that publicly traded mining operations spent an average of $79,995 to produce each Bitcoin during the fourth quarter of 2025. With Bitcoin currently valued at approximately $70,000, these companies are hemorrhaging roughly $19,000 for every coin mined.

🚨 JUST IN: Bitcoin miners are pivoting to AI and selling BTC to fund the transition.
Average cost to mine 1 BTC: ~$79,995
BTC price: ~$70,000
Over $70B in AI/HPC contracts signed as miners liquidate holdings and shift toward data center revenue.$BTC $MARA $RIOT $CORZ $WULF pic.twitter.com/hsSr3tRxlM

— MarketPulseHQ (@MPulseHQ) March 28, 2026

This crushing financial reality has triggered a dramatic industry transformation. Mining companies are rapidly repurposing their facilities into artificial intelligence and high-performance computing (HPC) infrastructure — and liquidating their Bitcoin reserves to finance the transition.

The scale of this shift is staggering. Public mining entities have collectively announced AI and HPC agreements exceeding $70 billion in value. CoreWeave’s partnership with Core Scientific represents a $10.2 billion commitment spanning 12 years. TeraWulf has locked in $12.8 billion in HPC revenue contracts. Hut 8 executed a $7 billion AI infrastructure lease. Cipher Digital secured a massive agreement with Google-backed Fluidstack worth billions.

Core Scientific is already deriving 39% of total revenue from AI colocation services. TeraWulf generates 27% from this segment. IREN sits at 9% but is expanding aggressively, constructing up to 200 megawatts of liquid-cooled GPU infrastructure.

According to CoinShares Head of Research James Butterfill, publicly listed miners could derive as much as 70% of revenue from AI operations by the close of 2026 — a dramatic increase from today’s 30% figure.

Financing the Infrastructure Transformation

Mining companies are funding this strategic pivot through two primary channels: leveraging debt and liquidating Bitcoin holdings.

IREN now shoulders $3.7 billion in convertible note obligations. TeraWulf carries $5.7 billion in aggregate debt. Cipher Digital issued $1.7 billion in senior secured notes during November, causing quarterly interest expenses to skyrocket from $3.2 million to $33.4 million in Q4 alone.

Simultaneously, public mining companies have collectively offloaded over 15,000 Bitcoin from peak treasury positions. Core Scientific liquidated approximately 1,900 BTC valued at $175 million in January. Bitdeer completely depleted its treasury reserves in February. Riot sold 1,818 BTC worth $162 million during December. Marathon, holding the largest public Bitcoin position at 53,822 BTC, amended its corporate policy in March to permit sales from its entire balance sheet reserve.

The financial incentives strongly favor AI infrastructure. Traditional Bitcoin mining facilities require roughly $700,000 to $1 million per megawatt in capital expenditure. AI data centers demand $8 million to $15 million per megawatt, but generate profit margins exceeding 85% with guaranteed long-term revenue contracts.

Impact on Bitcoin’s Network Security

The mining industry’s strategic realignment is manifesting in observable network metrics. [[LINK_START_2]]Bitcoin’s[[LINK_END_2]] hashrate reached a peak of 1,160 exahashes per second in October 2025. It has subsequently declined to approximately 920 EH/s, marked by three consecutive negative difficulty adjustments — the first such consecutive decline since July 2022.

On March 20, mining difficulty decreased 7.7%, representing one of the most significant single-period reductions recorded this year.

CoinShares forecasts hashrate could potentially recover to 1.8 zetahashes by year-end 2026 — but only under the condition that Bitcoin returns to $100,000 valuations. If prices remain beneath $80,000, the research firm anticipates additional miner capitulation.

Mining companies with secured AI contracts currently command valuations of 12.3 times forward sales. Pure Bitcoin mining operations trade at just 5.9 times. MARA was highlighted as among the few major miners maintaining focus on Bitcoin production and low-cost energy acquisition strategies.

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