Bitcoin miners are increasingly recognized as holding a valuable asset that has yet to be fully integrated into market valuations: their existing power infrastructure. Currently, these miners find themselves positioned at a pivotal juncture between two major capital ventures: the expansion of Bitcoin hash rate and the escalating demand for AI data centers.
As many cryptocurrency miners have established their operations, they have already secured land, power contracts, and cooling systems, along with the necessary grid connections. This infrastructure enables them to bypass the extensive waiting periods—often stretching until 2028 or beyond—that new data center projects face for grid interconnections.
Cryptocurrency miners currently exhibit a significant discrepancy in market valuation compared to traditional data centers. On a market-cap-per-megawatt basis, miners are trading at a massive discount, suggesting that the market may either be overlooking the demand for AI or holding doubts about miners’ execution capabilities. However, current industry trajectories indicate that miners are indeed making strides; public mining companies are ambitiously aiming to scale their power capacity from 7 gigawatts (GW) today to 20 GW by 2027.
An often-overlooked aspect of this industry is the ability of miners to provide grid services. They can adjust their energy consumption on demand, which is becoming increasingly valuable in a landscape pressured by AI clusters and domestic manufacturing relocations. When the grid requires additional power, miners can temporarily reduce their load, mitigating electricity shortages without causing outages. While this may result in reduced revenue, it is a service that is now monetizable.
The demand for AI data centers is projected to grow at a remarkable rate of 24% per year until 2030. For miners who maintain the right infrastructure, this growth could not only serve as a current advantage but also spark a significant revaluation of their assets.
Recent business developments are reflective of this evolving landscape. Marathon Digital Holdings (MARA) is in the process of transforming various mining locations into hyperscale data center campuses. Meanwhile, Core Scientific has secured financing of up to $1 billion from Morgan Stanley to pivot toward AI initiatives. CleanSpark has indicated that investing in Bitcoin mining is becoming less financially viable compared to the lucrative returns from AI.
The hash rate for Bitcoin mining is already feeling the effects of this shift, with a reported 6% decline since its peak in November 2025. Some of this decrease has been attributed to the redeployment of mining rigs for AI tasks, though it hasn’t yet threatened network security—a trend that industry observers will continue to monitor.
Bitdeer is also actively expanding its operations, deploying 50,000 proprietary ASICs across 413 megawatts of capacity. This initiative alone could potentially add 33 EH/s to the Bitcoin network and generate an additional $335 million in Bitcoin revenue at current price levels.
The forthcoming Q1 2026 earnings reports are set to be a critical inflection point. Stakeholders will be keen to observe metrics such as power capacity expansions, AI contract announcements, and revenue from energy curtailment services. Depending on these developments, the valuation gap identified by analysts may begin to close, or the current disparities might become increasingly difficult to rationalize as the industries of cryptocurrency and AI continue to evolve.

