The largest publicly traded Bitcoin miner in the United States just secured the capital to accelerate its exit from mining economics and into a business model that does not depend on Bitcoin’s price.
Core Scientific announced a $500 million commitment from JPMorgan Chase Bank, executed through the accordion feature of a 364-day senior secured credit facility initially established with Morgan Stanley earlier in March. The addition doubles Core Scientific’s total credit capacity to $1 billion, split equally between the two institutions. The facility carries an interest rate of the Secured Overnight Financing Rate plus 250 basis points. The amendment was signed on March 18 and the company drew the full incremental $500 million immediately upon closing.
The accordion feature allows a borrower to expand an existing credit facility without renegotiating the entire agreement, a structuring choice that reflects the speed at which Core Scientific is moving to deploy capital. Accessing the expansion on the same terms as the original facility rather than establishing a new credit agreement preserves existing covenants and avoids the timeline of a full underwriting process.
The proceeds are earmarked for Core Scientific’s transition from Bitcoin mining to high-density colocation and artificial intelligence workloads. Specifically the capital is directed toward equipment procurement and data center asset development, real property acquisition and pre-development costs, and energy procurement to secure power for expanding facilities. CEO Adam Sullivan stated the $1 billion capacity positions the company to meet strong demand for high-density infrastructure as it repurposes its existing 1,300 megawatt facility footprint.
That footprint is the core asset. Bitcoin mining facilities require large power connections, purpose-built cooling infrastructure, and physical security at scale. Those same characteristics are precisely what high-density AI compute colocation requires. The repurposing argument is that the capital investment already embedded in Core Scientific’s mining infrastructure has a second life as AI data center capacity without requiring ground-up construction.
The pivot is not funded by credit alone. Core Scientific indicated plans to monetize substantially all of its Bitcoin holdings to fund the transition, having already sold 1,900 BTC for $175 million in February 2026. That sale, executed during a period when Bitcoin was trading near its current levels, reflects a deliberate decision to convert mining output into capital for the AI infrastructure buildout rather than accumulating BTC on the balance sheet as Strategy and other treasury-focused companies have done.
The contrast with the miner behavior covered in earlier reporting this week is direct. The Miners’ Position Index showed Bitcoin miners broadly holding rather than selling as production costs exceeded spot price. Core Scientific is taking the opposite approach, liquidating holdings to fund a strategic repositioning that reduces its long-term exposure to mining economics entirely.
Core Scientific shares have delivered an 86% return over the past year, reflecting market confidence in the AI-focused strategy despite the ongoing profitability challenges in pure Bitcoin mining that have been covered throughout this week’s reporting. The $1 billion credit facility from two of the largest US investment banks arriving alongside that share performance confirms that institutional capital views the AI data center transition as a credible commercial strategy rather than a narrative pivot without operational substance.
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