Publicly listed Bitcoin miners liquidated more than 32,000 Bitcoin during the first quarter of 2026, marking a record sell-off as the industry's largest operators redirect billions in capital toward artificial intelligence.
This historic shift is unfolding precisely as the economics of Bitcoin validation reach a critical pressure point.
With mining profitability hovering near cyclical lows, weighted production costs surging, and network hashrate showing persistent signs of strain, the infrastructure giants that defined the last crypto boom are fundamentally reengineering their business models.
Public BTC miners turn to the balance sheet
The sheer magnitude of the first-quarter liquidation reflects the severity of the capital pivot.
Public mining firms unloaded more Bitcoin in the first three months of 2026 than they did throughout 2025.
To contextualize the scale of the sell-off, the Q1 offload easily surpassed the roughly 20,000 Bitcoin dumped by the industry during the chaotic Terra-Luna collapse in the second quarter of 2022.
According to on-chain data from CryptoQuant, miner reserves have steadily eroded throughout the cycle, with prominent operators now using their digital treasuries as vital liquidity engines rather than long-term strategic holdings.

The firm noted that, since the start of the current cycle, miners have recorded a net sell of 61,000 BTC. This heavy selling activity is led by Marathon Digital, which offloaded over 13,000 BTC and has since dropped out of the top three Bitcoin holders.
Other BTC miners selling their holdings include Cango, which sold 2,000 Bitcoin for roughly $143 million to extinguish Bitcoin-backed debt obligations and clear its balance sheet. Core Scientific unloaded around 1,900 Bitcoin in January to raise $175 million, while Riot Platforms sold 4,026 BTC.
Post-halving economics break the old model
The engine driving this mass exodus of capital is a broken economic model, exacerbated by the April 2024 halving, which slashed block rewards from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC.
The programmatic 50% cut in block subsidies fundamentally repriced the revenue baseline for the entire sector, leaving operators highly vulnerable to market fluctuations.
Since that reduction, BTC mining economics have been defined by unrelenting downward pressure.
James Butterfill, head of research at digital asset manager CoinShares, noted that the weighted average cash cost to produce a single Bitcoin for public operators surged to nearly $80,000 in the final quarter of 2025.

Meanwhile, the revenue side of the equation continues to deteriorate. Hashprice, the metric tracking expected revenue per unit of computing power, plummeted to between $28 and $30 per petahash per second per day in Q1 2026, marking some of the lowest profitability levels on record.
With transaction fees remaining structurally weak at less than 1% of total block rewards, miners are highly dependent on spot price appreciation.
However, with Bitcoin hovering around $77,000, substantially below its cycle peak of approximately $126,000 reached in October 2025, miners are caught in a vise.
Ballooning debt burdens and massive electricity overheads are squeezing cash flow to the breaking point, forcing executives to look elsewhere for earnings.
Why Wall Street is rewarding the AI pivot
Faced with shrinking margins, pure-play operators are finding that boards of directors and institutional investors are aggressively rewarding a pivot toward AI and high-performance computing.
Unlike the volatile, spot-market nature of Bitcoin mining, AI data centers offer stable, predictable, multi-year revenue contracts with technology giants like Google, Microsoft, and Anthropic.
The equity market’s verdict has been unambiguous. Mining companies that set AI revenue targets of 80% or higher have seen their stock prices skyrocket by an average of 500% over the past two years, securing vastly superior market multiples compared to their pure-play mining peers.
Butterfill estimates that public miners could derive up to 70% of their revenues from AI by the end of this year, a steep climb from roughly 30% today.

With more than $70 billion in cumulative AI and high-performance computing contracts announced across the public mining sector, capital is no longer flowing toward next-generation ASIC replacements.
Instead, debt and equity are being funneled into data-center-style infrastructure. Operators like TeraWulf, IREN, and Cipher have taken on billions in collective debt to fund these buildouts, driven by the underlying unit economics.
While electricity accounts for roughly 40% of Bitcoin mining revenue, energy costs for AI cloud operators leasing high-powered chips are in the low single digits.
Does less Bitcoin mining investment mean less security?
The wholesale migration of computing infrastructure has ignited a sharp debate over the long-term security of the Bitcoin network.
On the one hand, the bearish thesis holds that as public miners halt reinvestments in mining hardware and commit their massive energy capacities to AI, the network’s security backbone risks hollowing out at a critical juncture.
Charles Edwards, founder of Capriole Investments, views the trend with profound alarm, noting projections that the average Bitcoin revenue share among top public miners will collapse to just 30% within three years.
He observed:
“If these numbers are even half accurate… the energy and commitment to Bitcoin is under significant threat.”

Adding cultural texture to this shift, Bitcoin researcher Paul Sztorc noted that the industry is quietly scrubbing its original roots.
According to him, dedicated mining publications have rebranded to focus on broader energy themes, and major industry conferences have swapped out mining stages for energy-focused platforms, reflecting a sector actively distancing itself from pure crypto workloads.
Yet, veterans of the protocol argue this is precisely how the system was engineered to survive.
Blockstream CEO Adam Back countered the alarmism, pointing to Bitcoin's self-adjusting difficulty mechanism. If computing power leaves, mining difficulty drops, instantly improving profit margins for the remaining operators.
Back argued:
“It's an arbitrage, with equilibrium when mining margin is the same as AI workloads.”
He also described a “positive reflexivity” in which higher margins mean surviving miners sell less Bitcoin to cover power costs.
Meanwhile, James Check, an on-chain analyst at CheckOnchain, views the transition through the lens of pure capitalism. He noted:
“Massive turnover is literally the intended design of the difficulty adjustment.”
In his view, the AI pivot is a highly rational diversification strategy for infrastructure firms that simply “buy power and compute,” noting that AI serves as a constant baseload while Bitcoin mining remains an intermittent tool to balance grid loads.
The second half of the halving cycle
As the Bitcoin network progresses through the second half of this halving epoch by recently crossing block 945,000 in April 2026, the public mining industry faces a profound identity crisis.
Hashrate Index argued that the next two years, leading up to the 2028 halving, will severely test the protocol's self-correcting mechanisms against the gravitational pull of Wall Street's AI capital.
The outstanding questions facing the market are now structural, rather than cyclical. It remains to be seen whether the spot price of Bitcoin can stage a robust enough recovery to comfortably clear the near-record cash costs of production, or if network transaction fees will permanently remain a negligible fraction of total revenue.
If the underlying spot economics do not materially improve, the market will be forced to weigh whether the current, unprecedented pace of treasury liquidations can be sustained without permanently dampening asset prices.
Furthermore, the industry must determine the baseline at which the network's computing power will stabilize definitively once the marginal players have exited the ecosystem.
Ultimately, the most pressing tension is existential. By 2027, the publicly traded companies that heavily drove the industrialization of Bitcoin validation over the past half-decade may no longer be miners in the traditional sense.
Instead, they are on track to become diversified energy and high-performance computing conglomerates, holding only residual, legacy exposure to the digital asset that originally built them.
The post Public miners dump record BTC and are pivoting to AI — is Bitcoin’s security backbone starting to hollow out? appeared first on CryptoSlate.







