Bitcoin ‘just doesn’t cut it anymore’: Miners’ pivot to AI sends stocks soaring


Bitcoin miners are using their computing power to service a thirsty AI boom, and investors are taking notice.

Companies once focused solely on mining digital tokens are signing long-term contracts using their land, energy, and data centers for AI workloads.

Miners like IREN (IREN), Riot (RIOT), TeraWulf (WULF), and Cipher Miner (CIFR) are just a handful of players shifting their resources toward high-performance computing (HPC) infrastructure and artificial intelligence.

Industry insiders point to the promise of better returns from AI than crypto mining.

“Bitcoin mining just doesn’t cut it anymore,” Daniel Keller, CEO and co-founder of cloud infrastructure firm InFlux Technologies, told Yahoo Finance.

A crowded mining field and bitcoin’s price swings have squeezed margins. Jefferies analysts hly competitive mining environment and price volatility can impact bottom lines. Jefferies analysts estimate miner profits declined more than 7% in September as bitcoin prices declined.

Read more: What is bitcoin, and how does it work?

Every four years, bitcoin’s “halving” event cuts mining rewards in half, further eroding revenue over time.

“Due to halving schedules, mining is less profitable in the long run than AI computing,” said Keller.

“Additionally, demand for AI workloads is through the roof right now, and BTC miners have what AI data centers require: affordable and consistent power housed in temperate environments,” he added.

The pivot comes as AI demand booms and heavyweights such as ChatGPT maker OpenAI (OPAI.PVT) and chipmakers like Nvidia (NVDA), AMD (AMD), and Broadcom (AVGO) are striking new deals in the space.

Cloud hyperscalers like Google (GOOG, GOOGL), Microsoft (MSFT), and Amazon (AMZN) are facing multiyear grid and permitting delays for more AI data center capacity, creating an opportunity for smaller, power-ready operators to help meet demand.

“The access to ready and cheap renewable power combined with data center capabilities positions Bitcoin miners as attractive partners for AI cloud providers looking to accelerate time-to-market and build resilient high-performance computing clusters,” Bernstein’s Gautam Chhugani said in a note earlier this month.

Bernstein analysts estimate that bitcoin miners’ grid-connected power can cut data center deployment timelines by up to 75%. Additionally, their existing infrastructure is “closer to AI data centers” versus traditional ones.

“This allows Bitcoin miners to retrofit existing BTC mining facilities for AI/HPC at low incremental capex,” Chhugani wrote.

Earlier this week, bitcoin miner CleanSpark (CLSK) unveiled its move into AI data centers, using its land and computing infrastructure to tap into the booming market.

The announcement follows a slew of other players pursuing similar strategies.

Miner Riot’s shares are up 104% since the start of the year as the company has pivoted into AI. Over the summer, Riot announced additional acreage at its Corsicana, Texas, data center campus would be converted to mixed bitcoin and HPC use, expected to be online in 2026.

Meanwhile, bitcoin miner TeraWulf and peer Cipher Mining recently struck multibillion-dollar, decade-long leases with Fluidstack, a Google-backed AI cloud infrastructure company. Shares of TeraWulf have soared 150% since the start of the year.

In August, Galaxy Digital (GLXY) announced plans to transform its 1,500-acre Helios data center campus in Dickens County, Texas, into an AI and HPC hub, in a tie-up with cloud infrastructure firm CoreWeave (CRWV), whose big customers include OpenAI and Microsoft.

Crypto mining company Galaxy Digital announced plans in August to transform its 1,500 acre Helios data center campus in Dickens County, Texas into an AI and HPC hub (Photo Illustration by Thomas Fuller/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images) · SOPA Images via Getty Images

IREN, formally known as Iris Energy, paused its bitcoin mining expansion in April to pivot to AI cloud services. In August, the company announced the purchase of 4,200 Nvidia Blackwell chips as part of its expansion. The stock is up more than 500% year to date.

Analysts view the pivot to AI cloud services as structural and not a temporary side bet.

“Taken together — multi-year, investment-grade backstops, double-digit-year contract terms, and power-grid bottlenecks — this is not a band-aid while hyperscalers wait for their own campuses,” Compass Point analysts Michael Donovan and Ed Engel wrote earlier this month.

Ines Ferre is a senior business reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on X at @ines_ferre.

Click here for in-depth analysis of the latest stock market news and events moving stock prices

Read the latest financial and business news from Yahoo Finance

StockStory aims to help individual investors beat the market.
StockStory aims to help individual investors beat the market.





Source link