Bitcoin Mining Margins Tighten as AI Pivot Accelerates, Coinshares Says – Mining Bitcoin News
AI Boom Reshapes Bitcoin Mining Sector, Coinshares Report Shows
According to the latest bitcoin mining analysis, Q4 2025 marked one of the toughest periods for miners since the April 2024 halving, as bitcoin’s price slid from about $124,500 in October to roughly $86,000 by late December. At the same time, network hashrate remained near record levels, squeezing profitability. The weighted average cash cost to produce one bitcoin climbed to nearly $80,000, leaving many operators near breakeven.
Hashprice, a key revenue metric, dropped to roughly $36 to $38 per petahash per second (PH/s) per day in Q4, then fell further to around $29 in early 2026. Those conditions triggered signs of miner capitulation, including three consecutive negative difficulty adjustments for the first time since July 2022.
James Butterfill, head of research at Coinshares, stated the environment reflects “one of the most challenging periods” for miners since the last halving, driven by a combination of price pressure and rising network competition.
Against that backdrop, the industry is increasingly turning toward AI and high-performance computing (HPC) as an alternative revenue stream. Coinshares said publicly listed miners have announced more than $70 billion in AI and HPC-related contracts, with some firms expected to generate up to 70% of revenue from AI by the end of 2026.
The shift reflects a basic economic trade-off: AI infrastructure offers more stable returns than bitcoin mining under current conditions. Still, the transition is uneven. Some companies are aggressively repositioning as data center operators, while others continue prioritizing mining or adopting hybrid strategies.

Meanwhile, the Bitcoin network itself remains resilient despite recent volatility. Hashrate peaked above 1 zettahash per second in 2025 before pulling back and stabilizing near 1,020 exahash per second. Coinshares expects long-term growth to continue, projecting hashrate could reach 1.8 zettahash by the end of 2026 and 2 zettahash by early 2027.
Geographically, the United States, China and Russia still dominate global mining, accounting for about 68% of total hashrate, while countries like Paraguay and Ethiopia are gaining ground.
Despite the AI pivot, mining economics remain closely tied to bitcoin’s price. The report noted that a recovery toward $100,000 could lift hashprices and improve margins, while prolonged weakness may force more operators offline. For now, the sector appears to be splitting into two camps: traditional miners and hybrid infrastructure firms balancing bitcoin production with AI-driven workloads.
FAQ 🧭
Why are bitcoin miners struggling in 2026?Lower bitcoin prices and rising hashrate have compressed margins and pushed costs near breakeven. What is hash price and why does it matter?Hash price measures miner revenue per unit of computing power and directly impacts profitability. Why are miners moving into AI?AI infrastructure offers steadier returns compared to mining under current market conditions. Will bitcoin mining recover?Profitability depends largely on bitcoin’s price, with higher prices expected to improve margins.





