- Major publicly traded Bitcoin mining companies experienced significant declines, with losses up to 52% over the past week.
- Despite sector setbacks, some mining stocks have outperformed Bitcoin’s stable year-to-date growth, with IREN up approximately 370%.
- Mining firms are increasingly diversifying into AI and high-performance computing (HPC) to offset the challenges of halving events and falling mining profitability.
- Strategic shifts include winding down traditional Bitcoin operations in favor of AI and HPC data centers, exemplified by Bitfarms’ planned transition.
- Industry players are forming new partnerships, such as AI cloud contracts and cloud-based GPU hosting, to capitalize on the growing AI sector.
Publicly traded Bitcoin mining companies faced a challenging week, with most major firms registering double-digit declines as the sector underperformed Bitcoin itself. Over five trading days, firms like Cipher, Applied Digital, Core Scientific, CleanSpark, and Bitdeer lost between 23% to 52%, while other notable operators such as Riot and Hut 8 experienced mid-teens losses. At the time of writing, Bitcoin (BTC) traded around $94,400, marking a roughly 9% drop over the past week.
A recent Miner Mag report highlighted that the combined market value of public mining stocks has shrunk by over $20 billion in the last month, representing roughly a 25% decline since mid-October. This underperformance starkly contrasts Bitcoin’s relatively modest downturn, despite increased institutional interest from firms like Jane Street, Fidelity, and Barclays, who have expanded their holdings across several mining operators.
Remarkably, some mining stocks have outpaced Bitcoin’s year-to-date growth. For example, IREN, the largest public Bitcoin miner by market cap, has surged approximately 370%, while Cipher Mining has gained around 210%. In comparison, Bitcoin itself has only increased by about 1.5% in the same period, according to TradingView data.
Bitcoin miners turn to AI and HPC
As Bitcoin’s rewards halve roughly every four years, many miners are seeking new revenue streams amid rising operational challenges. The shift toward artificial intelligence (AI) and high-performance computing (HPC) has emerged as a prominent strategy, leveraging existing data center infrastructure optimized for energy and cooling efficiencies to support higher-margin workloads.
On Friday, Bitfarms’ stock fell sharply after announcing plans to wind down its conventional Bitcoin mining operations over two years, starting with its 18-megawatt Washington facility’s closure, as part of a broader pivot toward AI and HPC data centers.
“The company aims to repurpose its infrastructure for higher-margin AI workloads,” said a spokesperson.
Other miners are employing a hybrid approach rather than entirely exiting Bitcoin mining. In June, Core Scientific signed a $3.5 billion agreement with AI cloud provider CoreWeave to allocate 200 megawatts of hosting capacity for HPC applications. Furthermore, in October, CleanSpark’s shares surged approximately 13% following its announcement of entering the AI space. Additionally, IREN secured a five-year, $9.7 billion deal to supply Microsoft with Nvidia GPU-hosted cloud services, exemplifying a trend of diversification into high-tech sectors.
These strategic moves demonstrate how industry leaders are adapting to a challenging environment, balancing traditional mining with emerging AI and HPC opportunities to maintain growth and operational sustainability in the evolving crypto markets.


