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Bitcoin miners shift to energy and AI services

Bitcoin’s mining sector is undergoing a deep restructuring as profitability tightens and industry dynamics shift. With Bitcoin trading near $61,000 and global hash rate approaching 1 zettahash per second, mining operations are running close to break-even, pressured by declining block rewards and weak transaction fee income.

Profit margins shrink as revenue model lags

The strain on miners is no longer driven solely by reduced block subsidies. The transition toward a fee-based revenue model remains underdeveloped, leaving earnings heavily dependent on Bitcoin’s price. At the same time, many mining companies are pivoting toward infrastructure services, including energy management, AI computing, and high-performance computing (HPC), signaling a structural shift in how the sector operates.

Production models estimate Bitcoin’s base cost at around $46,744. Historically, when prices approach this level, less efficient operators exit the network, often marking market bottoms. However, current conditions show a disconnect between miner income and Bitcoin’s price.

At a market price of $61,000, theoretical daily mining revenue is დაახლოებით $78 million, yet actual earnings are closer to $33 million, reflecting a 136% gap. Despite near-record computing power, daily fee revenue remains დაახლოებით $220,000, far below historical expectations of nearly $9.7 million.

Costs rise above current price levels

Industry-wide financial data highlights the pressure. In 2025, miners generated დაახლოებით $17.2 billion in revenue, with electricity costs alone accounting for დაახლოებით $12.3 billion, or 71.5%. Hardware spending added another $4.5 billion, pushing the average break-even price to շուրջ $65,000—above current market levels.

Analysts estimate the average production cost closer to $63,500 in recent months, meaning any price movement toward this range forces inefficient miners to consider shutting down. This relationship between price and cost has become a key indicator of financial stress across the network.

Network signals show growing stress

Operational strain is now visible in Bitcoin’s core metrics. In the second week of June 2026, mining difficulty dropped by nearly 10%, one of the largest recent declines, as some operators powered down equipment.

While this reduction temporarily eases competition for remaining miners, it does not resolve the underlying revenue issue. The 7-day average of daily mining income has fallen to շուրջ $30 million, compared to more than $50 million during the previous summer.

Transaction fees remain negligible, contributing less than $250,000 per day. As a result, miner profitability continues to rely almost entirely on Bitcoin’s fixed block subsidy of 3.125 BTC and market price levels.

Shift toward AI and infrastructure accelerates

In response, publicly traded mining companies are rapidly expanding into AI and HPC infrastructure. By early 2026, the sector had announced more than $70 billion in AI- and HPC-related contracts, with projections suggesting these activities could make up to 70% of total revenue by year-end.

This shift is reshaping how these companies are valued. Firms such as Core Scientific, IREN, and TeraWulf are increasingly tied to data center and energy infrastructure markets rather than acting as direct proxies for Bitcoin price movements.

2028 halving expected to drive consolidation

Looking ahead, the 2028 halving is expected to intensify these pressures. Production costs are projected to rise to დაახლოებით $93,289 per Bitcoin, likely accelerating consolidation toward larger, well-capitalized firms with diversified income streams.

Companies with access to low-cost energy, strong balance sheets, and integrated AI computing operations are expected to maintain a competitive edge, while smaller operators may struggle to survive.

Market focus shifts to miner health indicators

For traders, network hash rate and mining difficulty are becoming critical indicators of sector health and potential selling pressure. Continued declines in hash rate would suggest that even after recent difficulty adjustments, profitability challenges persist.

As the mining industry transitions from pure coin production to infrastructure and energy management, its long-term sustainability will depend on adaptation. The current cycle is shaping up as a decisive test of which companies can evolve and secure a stable position in a rapidly changing landscape.


As mining shifts toward AI infrastructure, learn how Bitcoin mining really works to better understand this sector’s evolving economics.

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