Bitfarms shares fell 18% on Thursday after the company announced it will wind down its Bitcoin mining operations completely. The stock closed at $2.60 and continued dropping in after-hours trading to $2.51.
Bitfarms Ltd., BITF
The Canadian mining company plans to convert all its Bitcoin mining sites to artificial intelligence and high-performance computing data centers. This transition will take place over 2026 and 2027.
The company’s 18-megawatt Bitcoin mining facility in Washington state will be the first to convert. Bitfarms expects this site to support AI operations by December 2026.
CEO Ben Gagnon said the Washington site alone could produce more net operating income as an AI facility than the company has ever generated from Bitcoin mining. The site represents less than 1% of the company’s total developable portfolio.
The announcement came alongside disappointing third-quarter earnings. Bitfarms posted a net loss of $46 million compared to a $24 million loss in the same quarter last year.
The company’s loss per share was 8 cents. Analysts had expected a 2-cent per share loss.
Revenue increased 156% year-over-year to $69 million. However, this missed analyst estimates by more than 16%.
Gagnon explained that Bitcoin mining is becoming less profitable for US-based operations. Mining difficulty and costs continue to rise as the network grows.
He told investors that public Bitcoin miners now represent nearly a third of the entire network. Most appear interested in moving to higher-margin HPC and AI businesses.
Bitcoin mining operations are moving to cheaper locations around the world. Gagnon pointed to major growth in the Middle East, Africa and Russia.
The CEO said US miners face better opportunities in HPC and AI. The United States offers the best market for these services while Bitcoin mining can operate from anywhere.
Bitfarms follows other mining companies exploring AI opportunities. Bitcoin miner IREN signed a $9.7 billion multi-year deal with Microsoft in November to provide AI compute access.
MARA announced plans to expand into AI compute services last week while reporting record revenues. However, Bitfarms is the first major player to announce a complete exit from Bitcoin mining.
Gagnon said opportunities to move Bitfarms’ mining operations to cheaper locations are limited. He called the pivot to AI a better use of management time and resources.
The company operates 12 data centers across North America with 341 megawatts of energy capacity. Bitfarms recently secured a $300 million debt facility in October for a site in Panther Creek, Pennsylvania.
The Pennsylvania site aims to capitalize on growing demand for AI infrastructure. The company plans to use Nvidia GB300 chips with advanced liquid cooling at the Washington facility.
Bitfarms mined 520 BTC during the third quarter at an average direct cost of $48,200 per coin. The company held 1,827 BTC as of Wednesday.
Shares have fallen 51% over the past month as market conditions have weakened.
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