Bitcoin miners with the right infrastructure and management talent can gain substantial value by pivoting into the booming AI and HPC data center market, analysts say.
As demand for AI infrastructure grows, crypto miners with access to power and cooling could be well positioned to profit from supporting high-performance computing workloads, according to a Galaxy Digital research report.
The analysts believe miners with experienced management teams capable of executing AI and HPC buildouts have a âtremendous opportunityâ to bring âsignificant incremental value to their companies.â The appeal lies in the long-term contracts and strong, steady cash flow models of AI and HPC colocation â described by Galaxy Digital as âpredictable and high margin cash flow streamsâ â a level of stability thatâs often lacking in crypto markets.
âNot only is revenue more predictable than Bitcoin mining, itâs also uncorrelated to crypto markets, which smooths revenue profiles of companies with high exposure to the volatile crypto markets. In Bitcoin bear markets, this can enhance financial stability, allowing miners to continue to raise cash through equity or debt without incurring excessive dilution or interest burden.â
Galaxy Digital
Financing options are also expanding. Data center operators that have a lease in hand with a credit worthy counterparty âcan take that lease and raise substantial sums of project financing to construct the data center,â Galaxy wrote, citing $18 billion in development financing underwritten in Q1 2024 alone.
The valuation gap is another key factor, with the report noting that Bitcoin (BTC) miners have typically traded at six to 12 times their earnings, while some of the worldâs largest data center operators are valued at 20 to 25 times earnings.
However, not all crypto mining sites are fit for the shift, Mike Novogratzâs Galaxy Digital wrote, noting that some may not have the right conditions for AI and high-performance computing, even if they still work well for Bitcoin mining.
With U.S. data center capacity expected to more than double by 2030, Galaxy says miners who adapt now could become âsome of the largest operators in the industry.â