Bitcoin miners, often seen as the backbone of the cryptocurrency ecosystem, are currently facing significant challenges in a volatile market. Recent insights from CoinShares’ Q1 2026 mining report reveal that the average cost for publicly listed miners to produce a single Bitcoin (BTC) has surged to approximately $80,000. This is staggering, especially when Bitcoin’s current trading price hovers around $67,000, indicating that miners are operating at a loss.
A pivotal factor contributing to these rising costs is the recent halving that occurred in April 2024, which effectively halved the reward for mining from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC. This reduction means that miners must exert the same amount of electricity and computational power to earn half the Bitcoin, significantly increasing their production costs overnight. Compounding this issue, the ongoing geopolitical tensions, particularly the conflict in Iran, have propelled oil prices above $100 for the first time since 2022, inciting broader energy cost increases. As electricity constitutes roughly 75-85% of a miner’s total expenses, the financial strain is immense, forcing some operations to shut down as they become unprofitable.
The impact on the Bitcoin network is palpable. Mining difficulty has recently dropped for three consecutive adjustments, marking a significant shift not seen since July 2022. The hashrate—a measure of computational power—has fallen from its peak of 1,160 EH/s to approximately 920 EH/s, reflecting unprofitable miners exiting the network. Consequently, the average block times have extended to over 12 minutes, well beyond the normal 10-minute target.
In response to these pressing challenges, many miners are pivoting their focus away from Bitcoin. Instead of waiting for market conditions to improve, publicly listed miners have secured over $70 billion in contracts related to artificial intelligence (AI) and high-performance computing, utilizing the existing infrastructure initially laid out for Bitcoin mining. Core Scientific, for example, has locked in a $10.2 billion, 12-year deal with CoreWeave, while Hut 8 has committed to a $7 billion AI data center lease in its River Bend campus. Current estimates project that by the end of 2026, these miners could derive around 70% of their revenue from AI, up from roughly 30% presently.
This shift has not gone unnoticed on Wall Street, where miners with secured AI contracts are trading at a forward sales multiple of 12.3x—more than double the 5.9x multiple for those still solely focused on Bitcoin. This indicates a broader market sentiment that values the infrastructure projects more for their potential in AI than in traditional Bitcoin mining.
To finance their transition, these miners are selling Bitcoin from their treasury holdings, including long-held supplies accumulated over years. Publicly listed miners have collectively divested more than 15,000 BTC since their peak treasury levels. Noteworthy examples include Bitdeer, which reduced its treasury to zero in February, and Riot Platforms, which sold 1,818 BTC for $162 million in December. Even Marathon, the largest public holder of Bitcoin, has expanded its policy to authorize sales from its complete balance sheet reserve.
This trend is significant; if companies dedicated to securing the Bitcoin network are liquidating their holdings to support entirely different businesses, it signals a troubling shift that exacerbates the selling pressure on the already fragile market.
For current Bitcoin holders, this situation portends additional selling pressure on a market already fraught with challenges. Miners offloading both newly mined coins and treasury assets intensifies supply on exchanges amid dwindling demand. There are projections for further capitulation if Bitcoin does not recover above the $80,000 mark, and upcoming difficulty adjustments are expected to decline again.
Historically, however, such cycles of miner capitulation have tended to end with a recovery. Weak operators exit the market, which eventually reduces costs for the remaining miners, easing selling pressure, and leading to eventual price recovery. What remains crucial at this juncture is whether Bitcoin can maintain the $66,000 support level as the market navigates these tumultuous conditions.


