Bitcoin miners’ real prize is power as AI reshapes mining

by admin

Bitcoin miners spent years racing to secure cheap electricity, and that electricity has since become more valuable than the Bitcoin mining business built on it.

That inversion drives Fidelity’s May 2026 assessment that AI hosting could give miners a second revenue stream while flattening Bitcoin’s hash rate as major operators redirect energy infrastructure away from pure mining, and two hyperscaler contracts have put a concrete price on what miners built.

Cipher Mining’s SEC-filed business update announced a roughly $5.5 billion, 15-year lease with AWS to provide 300 MW of turnkey space and power for AI workloads, with delivery beginning in July 2026.

IREN signed a roughly $9.7 billion, five-year GPU cloud contract with Microsoft, deploying NVIDIA GB300 GPUs through 2026 at its 750 MW Childress, Texas campus and supporting 200 MW of critical IT load.

Miner Hyperscaler Contract value Duration Power / capacity Delivery timeline Why it matters
Cipher Mining AWS ~$5.5B 15 years 300 MW Begins July 2026 Shows powered mining sites can be leased as AI infrastructure
IREN Microsoft ~$9.7B 5 years 200 MW critical IT load at 750 MW Childress campus GPUs deployed through 2026 Shows miners can monetize power campuses through GPU cloud, not just BTC mining

Miners had already secured land, grid interconnection, substations, and power rights, which are what AI data centers need and cannot build fast enough.

The 2024 halving compressed hash prices and pushed CoinShares’ tracked weighted-average cash cost to roughly $79,995 per BTC by the first quarter of 2026, prodding operators toward AI hosting as a revenue stabilizer, leasing unused capacity, keeping the mining rigs running, and offsetting the worst of the Bitcoin downturns.

CoinShares estimates public miners’ AI and HPC contracts had surpassed $70 billion in aggregate by early 2026, with listed miners on pace to derive as much as 70% of revenue from AI by year-end, up from roughly 30%.

That is a revenue hedge that the Cipher and IREN contracts have since displaced with price discovery for power campuses.

Price discovery changes the internal math

Fidelity’s January 2026 analysis identified a mining-to-AI crossover at roughly $60 to $70 per petahash per day for a 20-joule-per-terahash fleet, meaning most 20-to-25 J/TH miners would need the hash price to rise 40% to 60% to match contracted GPU-hosting economics.

The Hashrate Index’s May 25 data has since extended this distance, with the US dollar-denominated hash price at $35.88 per PH/day, placing the AI crossover at approximately 67% to 95% above the current spot.

A miner sitting on 300 MW of powered, permitted infrastructure now faces a choice between deploying ASICs and earning $35.88 per PH/day, or signing a hyperscaler lease at contracted rates that require hash price to nearly double to match.

AWS and Microsoft have effectively published a floor on what that infrastructure is worth to someone other than Bitcoin, and every major operator with comparable assets now has that number in their model.

AI infrastructure costs between $8 million and $15 million per megawatt to build, compared to $700,000 to $1 million for Bitcoin mining infrastructure, and miners who transition enter a more capital-intensive business with fundamentally different debt profiles, valuation metrics, and execution risk.

Bitcoin mining must nearly double to match AI hossting economics
At $35.88 per petahash per day, Bitcoin’s current hashprice sits 67% to 95% below Fidelity’s estimated AI-hosting crossover range of $60 to $70.

Hash rate may no longer follow BTC price alone

Bitcoin’s mining expansion historically followed price, with miners ordering more machines when BTC rose and cutting capacity when it fell.

VanEck’s April ChainCheck recorded 30-day hash rate momentum at the 16th percentile and 90-day momentum at the 9th percentile, the densest cluster of sustained hash-rate drawdowns since China’s 2021 mining ban.

CoinWarz data as of May 28 showed Bitcoin difficulty at 136.61T and a 90-day difficulty change of -5.40%, consistent with Fidelity’s picture of mining churn.

Bitcoin’s 2,016-block difficulty adjustment is still the counterweight, since every time hash rate exits, it lowers the computational cost of producing valid blocks and raises revenue per unit of remaining hash once difficulty resets.

A 20% hash-rate exit would lift surviving miners’ hash price to roughly $44.85 per PH/day, while a 30% exit would bring it to roughly $51.26, still well short of Fidelity’s AI crossover unless BTC price or transaction fees rise meaningfully.

Power locked into 15-year AWS leases or five-year Microsoft GPU contracts cannot rotate back to mining even if ASIC economics recover. In older cycles, idle hash returned because machines could be switched back on, while in this cycle the campuses themselves may be committed elsewhere.

Bitcoin gets the tighter market it needs

If BTC moves toward $100,000 to $140,000 or transaction fees rise materially, the economics realign.
A 20% reduction in network hash rate lowers the BTC price required to reach the $60 to $70 AI crossover to approximately $98,000 to $114,000, and a 30% reduction lowers that threshold to roughly $86,000 to $100,000.

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