In trading desks from New York to London the real January drama is not the next CPI print. It is a single decision date sitting on MSCI’s calendar. On January 15In trading desks from New York to London the real January drama is not the next CPI print. It is a single decision date sitting on MSCI’s calendar. On January 15

How a January 15 Call Could Hand Core Scientific to the Sharks

2025/12/17 16:09

In trading desks from New York to London the real January drama is not the next CPI print. It is a single decision date sitting on MSCI’s calendar. On January 15 the index giant is expected to finalize a proposal that could push bitcoin exposed names including big miners and bitcoin treasury style companies out of its benchmarks. That sounds technical until you remember how the modern market works. Indexes are the rails and roughly trillions of dollars of passive and rules based capital ride on them. If certain miners like Marathon Riot and CleanSpark end up on the wrong side of that ruling the result is not a polite rotation. It is forced selling that could reach into the 10 figure range and turn already volatile tickers into liquidity stress tests. Commentary in the market has floated scenarios where similar exclusions tied to bitcoin heavy balance sheets lead to multi billion dollar outflows across MSCI linked products.​

To understand why sophisticated players are circling names like Core Scientific you have to zoom in on the unit that really matters megawatts. Core Scientific controls hundreds of megawatts of data center power originally built for bitcoin mining and is pivoting that footprint into high performance computing for AI through multi year hosting deals with CoreWeave. One detailed breakdown of those assets pegs Core Scientific’s implied value around $5.6M per megawatt based on public market cap and uncontracted capacity. By contrast a marquee deal to acquire Aligned Data Centers which serve AI cloud and enterprise customers valued that infrastructure at roughly $8M per megawatt. Same substations same transformers same 24/7 power draw different sticker price because one is wrapped in an AI narrative and the other has “bitcoin miner” in the ticker description.​

That spread is exactly what is attracting sharp money. CoreWeave already has more than $10B of revenue commitments tied to hundreds of megawatts at Core Scientific sites and then moved to acquire the company outright to lock in 1.3 GW of gross power capacity across its footprint. Even after a contentious shareholder process around earlier deal terms analysts kept coming back to the same takeaway. There is a structural valuation gap between AI labeled infrastructure that clears at something like $8M per megawatt and public mining peers that the market is still pricing materially lower despite increasingly AI heavy contracts. If you believe compute is the new oil that gap is not a curiosity. It is an arbitrage.​

Enter Citadel. On December 10 a Schedule 13G filing showed Citadel Securities entities crossing the 5.5% ownership threshold in Core Scientific with roughly 17.2M shares. The stake is formally passive and largely tied to market making inventories but the signal is clear to anyone who has watched this movie in other sectors. When liquidity firms lean into a name ahead of structural catalysts they position themselves at the center of the order flow when volatility hits. If MSCI’s eventual framework pushes more bitcoin correlated names out of its indices and passive capital is forced to sell miners and treasury style plays that becomes a supply event into a book already controlled by fast desks.​

This is where “the exclusion creates the entry” stops sounding like a slogan and starts reading like a trade plan. If MSCI’s rules tighten around companies whose bitcoin exposure crosses key thresholds passive funds will have to dump first and ask questions later. That selling does not care whether Core Scientific is now functionally an AI infrastructure operator with a multiyear CoreWeave backlog or whether Marathon and Riot are quietly signing high performance computing colocation deals alongside mining. It only cares about index eligibility screens. On the other side of that forced flow sit hedge funds prop desks and market makers that have already run the per megawatt math and compared it to AI data center comps.​

The insider read right now is that January 15 is less about crypto being “kicked out” and more about a transfer of ownership. Index capital that bought these names for exposure to bitcoin beta and later for balance sheet arbitrage may be pushed out by rule changes. Strategic and trading oriented players who think in megawatts basis points and optionality get the chance to step in at distressed valuations relative to AI infrastructure. Citadel’s disclosed stake in Core Scientific sits as a real time example of that posture. If MSCI pulls the trigger the first move will look like a liquidation. To the desks watching the spread between $3M and $8M per megawatt it will look like inventory.

Originally published at https://coinbasecorridor.blogspot.com on December 17, 2025.


How a January 15 Call Could Hand Core Scientific to the Sharks was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

Market Opportunity
Core DAO Logo
Core DAO Price(CORE)
$0.1434
$0.1434$0.1434
-0.89%
USD
Core DAO (CORE) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

What We Know (and Don’t) About Modern Code Reviews

What We Know (and Don’t) About Modern Code Reviews

This article traces the evolution of modern code review from formal inspections to tool-driven workflows, maps key research themes, and highlights a critical gap
Share
Hackernoon2025/12/17 17:00
X claims the right to share your private AI chats with everyone under new rules – no opt out

X claims the right to share your private AI chats with everyone under new rules – no opt out

X says its Terms of Service will change Jan. 15, 2026, expanding how the platform defines user “Content” and adding contract language tied to the operation and
Share
CryptoSlate2025/12/17 19:24
Michael Saylor Pushes Digital Capital Narrative At Bitcoin Treasuries Unconference

Michael Saylor Pushes Digital Capital Narrative At Bitcoin Treasuries Unconference

The post Michael Saylor Pushes Digital Capital Narrative At Bitcoin Treasuries Unconference appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The suitcoiners are in town.  From a low-key, circular podium in the middle of a lavish New York City event hall, Strategy executive chairman Michael Saylor took the mic and opened the Bitcoin Treasuries Unconference event. He joked awkwardly about the orange ties, dresses, caps and other merch to the (mostly male) audience of who’s-who in the bitcoin treasury company world.  Once he got onto the regular beat, it was much of the same: calm and relaxed, speaking freely and with confidence, his keynote was heavy on the metaphors and larger historical stories. Treasury companies are like Rockefeller’s Standard Oil in its early years, Michael Saylor said: We’ve just discovered crude oil and now we’re making sense of the myriad ways in which we can use it — the automobile revolution and jet fuel is still well ahead of us.  Established, trillion-dollar companies not using AI because of “security concerns” make them slow and stupid — just like companies and individuals rejecting digital assets now make them poor and weak.  “I’d like to think that we understood our business five years ago; we didn’t.”  We went from a defensive investment into bitcoin, Saylor said, to opportunistic, to strategic, and finally transformational; “only then did we realize that we were different.” Michael Saylor: You Come Into My Financial History House?! Jokes aside, Michael Saylor is very welcome to the warm waters of our financial past. He acquitted himself honorably by invoking the British Consol — though mispronouncing it, and misdating it to the 1780s; Pelham’s consolidation of debts happened in the 1750s and perpetual government debt existed well before then — and comparing it to the gold standard and the future of bitcoin. He’s right that Strategy’s STRC product in many ways imitates the consols; irredeemable, perpetual debt, issued at par, with…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 02:12