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Miner Economics Under Pressure: How AI Transformation Is Reshaping the Bitcoin Mining Landscape?
In the ongoing evolution of the cryptocurrency industry, Bitcoin mining, as its underlying infrastructure, has always been a key barometer for measuring network health and industry capital trends. Recently, cryptocurrency asset management firm CoinShares released a report revealing a trend that is profoundly impacting the mining ecosystem: as competition within the Bitcoin network intensifies and price fluctuations occur, miners are facing significant pressure on their break-even point, while the strategic shift towards artificial intelligence (AI) and high-performance computing (HPC) is accelerating. This structural change not only pertains to the miners’ own balance sheets but also signals a restructuring of power dynamics in Bitcoin mining and the entire cryptocurrency infrastructure sector.
The Dual Pressure of Hash Rate Peaks and Price Corrections Post-Halving
Looking back over the past year, Bitcoin mining has experienced a transition from a “sweet spot” to a “stress test.” The Bitcoin halving event in April 2024 reduced the block reward from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC, marking the starting point for this economic model reconstruction. In the following months, the industry welcomed a wave of strong hash rate growth after a brief period of adaptation.
According to public data, the total network hash rate climbed to an all-time high of nearly 1,160 EH/s in early October 2025. However, as we entered the fourth quarter of 2025, the market environment deteriorated sharply. The price of Bitcoin fell from its historical peak of around $125,000 in early October to around $86,000 by the end of December. This approximate 31% price drop, coupled with the still high total network hash rate, compressed the miners’ core profit metric—hash rate price.
Data shows that the hash rate price fell to around $36-38 / PH/s / day in the fourth quarter of 2025 and further declined to the range of $28-30 / PH/s / day in the first quarter of 2026. This means that for many miners, daily mining income has approached or even fallen below their operating costs.
Rising Costs and Balance Sheet Restructuring
According to CoinShares’ analysis, this round of economic pressure is reflected in the significant increase in miners’ comprehensive costs at the data level. Their report indicates that in the fourth quarter of 2025, the weighted average cash cost for publicly listed mining companies to produce one Bitcoin had risen to approximately $79,995.
The above data shows that the average mining cost for publicly listed mining companies is now higher than the current market price ($68,566.1), which means that a significant portion of miners is already facing cash cost losses without considering non-cash costs such as depreciation and equity incentives.
James Butterfill, the research director at CoinShares, pointed out that this is the most challenging quarter for miners since the halving in April 2024. The persistent low hash rate prices and high electricity costs have forced many miners to operate at or near the break-even line. In response, some miners have begun to make strategic adjustments. Data shows that publicly listed mining companies collectively reduced their Bitcoin inventories, having sold off more than 15,000 BTC from peak levels. This indicates that the strategy of selling assets to maintain operational cash flow has become a common choice in the industry during periods of stress.
Is the AI Transition a Salvation or a Risk?
Faced with challenging mining economics, the prevailing opinion in the market is that the transition to AI and high-performance computing has become a key pathway for miners seeking survival and development.
The AI data center business can provide miners with more stable and higher-margin cash flows than Bitcoin mining. AI clients typically sign long-term contracts, providing miners with predictable income that effectively hedges against the risks of Bitcoin price volatility. It is estimated that by the end of 2026, some publicly listed mining companies may see their revenue from AI business increase significantly from the current approximately 30% to 70%.
However, the AI transition does not come without costs. On one hand, AI data centers have much higher requirements for power stability, network latency, and hardware configuration compared to Bitcoin mining, which necessitates substantial capital investments in infrastructure upgrades. For instance, some mining companies have issued billions of dollars in long-term bonds or convertible notes to finance their transitions, greatly altering their balance sheet structures and increasing financial leverage.
On the other hand, this transition has also sparked discussions about “decentralization.” Some argue that large-scale shifts to AI by miners may lead to changes in the concentration of hash rates within the Bitcoin network, potentially marginalizing “pure miners” who have long focused on Bitcoin mining, while mining companies that can flexibly transition evolve into data center infrastructure providers, fundamentally shifting their business focus.
Examination of Narrative Authenticity
CoinShares’ report provides a clear framework for industry observation, but its conclusions must also be viewed in the context of a dynamically changing market. The report notes that despite significant economic pressures, the total network hash rate has recovered to around 1,020 EH/s after a brief decline from late 2025 to early 2026. This data suggests that the industry has not experienced a systemic collapse. The three consecutive reductions in mining difficulty have historical precedents and can be seen as a mechanism of market self-regulation at work.
Moreover, the geographical distribution of hash rates is evolving. The United States, China, and Russia still control about 68% of the global hash rate, but emerging markets (such as Paraguay, Ethiopia, and Oman) are entering the top ten in hash rates due to their low-cost electricity resources, demonstrating miners’ ongoing efforts to seek low-cost energy globally. These dynamic changes together form a reality that is more complex than a single “break-even” narrative.
Industry Impact Analysis: The Identity Reshaping from Miners to AI Service Providers
This pressure is profoundly reshaping the structure of Bitcoin mining. A notable trend is the differentiation of the miner community: one group continues to stick to Bitcoin mining as “pure mining companies,” relying on very low electricity costs and efficient operational management; the other is actively transitioning to “data center operators,” leveraging existing power infrastructure and sites to provide services to AI clients through hardware and network upgrades.
This differentiation is widening the gap between miners. Those with high-quality power contracts, large-scale land, and substantial capital are taking the lead in the AI transition, able to secure AI orders worth billions of dollars, thus gaining stronger risk resilience and profit prospects. In contrast, miners constrained by high electricity costs or insufficient capital face the risk of being eliminated in fierce competition. This is essentially a survival of the fittest within the industry, driven by the reallocation of capital and technology towards greater efficiency and diversification.
Multi-Scenario Evolution Projections
The future of Bitcoin miners will depend on the synergistic evolution of Bitcoin prices and industry strategic transitions. Based on current data, we can project several possible scenarios:
If Bitcoin prices rebound to $100,000 or higher as some market analysts predict, hash rate prices will also bounce back. In this scenario, the profitability of mining operations will significantly increase. This may reduce the urgency for miners to transition to AI, but those already engaged in transition projects, especially those with signed long-term AI contracts, will continue to enjoy advantages from dual drivers. Their balance sheets will be more robust, allowing them to benefit from both the cyclical returns of mining and the stable cash flow from AI business.
If Bitcoin prices remain below $80,000 for an extended period or even decline further, mining operations will continue to be under pressure. This will accelerate the exit of high-cost miners, prompting the total network hash rate to further concentrate among leading mining companies that possess cost advantages and AI transition capabilities. Miners that fail to transition will face greater survival crises, potentially being forced to sell assets or shut down. In this scenario, industry concentration will significantly increase, and AI business will become a key determinant of miners’ survival.
This is a potential reverse scenario. If capital expenditures in the AI industry or the pace of technological iterations slow down, leading to demand for computing centers falling short of expectations, miners who heavily invested in AI transitions may face the risk of declining return on investment. At the same time, the high debts they carry may become a new source of financial pressure. In this scenario, over-leveraged mining companies could face challenges even more severe than simply mining.
Conclusion
CoinShares’ report clearly depicts the complex situation Bitcoin miners face in 2026: on one hand, the effects of the halving and price corrections create a dual squeeze of “high costs and declining revenues”; on the other hand, the wave of AI transitions opens new imaginative spaces for the industry but also brings new financial risks and strategic choices.
The Bitcoin mining industry is at a critical crossroads. Whether to stick to the core business of mining or embrace the wave of AI, miners need to strike a delicate balance between capital efficiency, risk control, and long-term strategy. This transformation driven by economic pressure is reshaping the underlying logic of cryptocurrency infrastructure, and its ultimate outcome will profoundly influence the distribution of hash rates and security models within the Bitcoin network in the coming years. For market participants, continuously monitoring miner costs, hash rate prices, and changes in the balance sheets of leading mining companies will be a key window for understanding deeper industry trends.