MARA Holdings is making a substantial shift away from its traditional identity as a bitcoin miner, having sold off $1.5 billion worth of bitcoin in the first quarter of the year. This strategic pivot follows a period of weaker financial performance, prompting the company to focus more on power infrastructure and artificial intelligence (AI) data centers.
In its latest financial report, MARA detailed a first-quarter revenue of $174.6 million, reflecting an 18% decrease compared to the previous year. The company also reported a significant net loss of approximately $1.3 billion, primarily attributed to an estimated $1 billion decline in the fair value of its digital assets, driven by a substantial drop in bitcoin prices during the reporting period. Despite producing 2,247 bitcoin and achieving a 33% year-over-year increase in energized hashrate to 72.2 exahash per second, these operational advancements were not enough to counterbalance the mark-to-market losses on its holdings.
To strengthen its balance sheet amidst these challenges, MARA sold around $1.5 billion of bitcoin within the quarter, including a notable $1.1 billion block towards the end of the period, which was utilized to repurchase convertible notes. The sale involved offloading 20,880 bitcoins, reducing its holdings from 38,689 to 35,303 coins, and resulted in a notable drop in its rank in the public bitcoin holder landscape from the second-largest to the fourth-largest, as indicated by Bitcoin Treasuries data. The management described this move as leveraging bitcoin as “ammunition” for its balance sheet rather than treating it as an untouchable reserve.
In a clear shift in strategy, MARA is indicating a transition from aggressive expansion of mining capabilities. The company has expressed that it does not plan to make substantial purchases of new ASIC miners, contrasting markedly with strategies employed during the previous market cycle that aimed to boost hashrate aggressively. Instead, MARA’s management has signaled an intention to invest in energy and data infrastructure that can accommodate both bitcoin mining and high-performance computing tasks.
Central to this strategy is the impending $1.5 billion acquisition of the Long Ridge Energy & Power campus located in Hannibal, Ohio. This facility features a 505-megawatt gas-fired power plant and offers substantial land that can be utilized for further expansion. MARA foresees that the site could support upwards of 600 megawatts dedicated to AI and critical IT loads through scheduled developments, integrating its existing mining operations into this expanded framework.
Additionally, the company has forged a partnership with Starwood Capital to transform specific mining sites into AI and high-performance computing data centers, thereby broadening its revenue streams beyond traditional block rewards. According to company disclosures, nearly 90% of MARA’s non-hosted mining capacity is expected to eventually support AI and IT infrastructure.
This dual focus on bitcoin mining and AI computing positions MARA at the intersection of two energy-intensive industries, allowing it the flexibility to allocate power resources toward whichever sector demonstrates more favorable returns at any given time.


