Bitcoin Mining Hit Its Breaking Point — Now AI Is Taking Over Its Racks | US Crypto News
- Bitcoin mining costs hit record highs while hashprice collapses post-halving.
- AI datacenters outbid miners, paying 10–20× more per megawatt.
- Industry splits into AI-driven megacampuses and low-cost stranded-energy miners.
Welcome to the US Crypto News Morning Briefing—your essential rundown of the most important developments in crypto for the day ahead.
Grab a coffee to read how the Bitcoin mining sector is changing. Skyrocketing costs, collapsing fees, and the rise of AI are forcing miners to rethink their playbook, turning once-stable operations into a battleground for next-generation compute power.
Crypto News of the Day: AI Takes Over Bitcoin Mining Racks as Costs Explode and Profitability Craters
The CoinShares Bitcoin Mining Report Q4 2025 reported that the sector has hit its breaking point. Production costs have surged to all-time highs, hash price has collapsed, and artificial intelligence (AI) is now outbidding miners for their own infrastructure, triggering the most dramatic structural shift the sector has ever faced.
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The industry entered Q2 2025 with a brutal new reality:
- The average cash cost to mine one BTC among public miners jumped to approximately $74,600,
- All-in costs soared to $137,800.
- Transaction fees, once a buffer for miner revenue, fell below 1% of block rewards in May and June, the weakest contribution since the 2024 halving.
Yet even as margins collapsed, the Bitcoin network continued to climb, smashing through 1 Zetta hash/s for the first time in August.
Public miners contributed only about 80 EH/s of year-to-date growth, meaning most of the expansion is now coming from private operators, sovereign miners, and well-capitalized energy players with vastly cheaper power.
The result: miners are being diluted by hashrate growth they are no longer driving.
AI Moves In — And It Pays 10–20× More Per Megawatt
A far bigger disruption is unfolding at the infrastructure level. Industrial-scale mining campuses, comprising 100MW to 1GW sites, share nearly identical power, cooling, and rack density requirements with modern AI datacenters.
That overlap has turned mining facilities into prime targets for hyperscalers.
Deals from Google–TeraWulf, Google–Cipher, and multi-site agreements with Fluidstack signal the same direction, that big-tech is moving into miner-built capacity at a premium.
The math explains why. Bitcoin mining yields roughly $1 million per megawatt, while AI compute generates $10 million to $20 million per megawatt.
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No miner can ignore that spread.
Industry Splits: AI Megacampuses vs. Mobile, Ultra-Low-Cost Miners
The sector is now diverging into two clear models:
- 1. Megascale miners → fully or partially converting to AI/HPC
These facilities can upgrade their electrical topology and uptime standards to meet enterprise requirements. They’re signing decade-long contracts and shifting from volatile block rewards to stable, capacity-based revenue.
2. Low-cost, mobile miners → shifting to stranded energy
Miners unable to compete with AI are moving off-grid: flare gas, remote hydro, and surplus renewables. Portable rigs are being deployed everywhere cheap energy exists, echoing mining’s early decentralized roots.
This migration marks a long-term reshaping of the industry, and not a temporary cycle.
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According to a CoinShares report:
- Hashprice averaged approximately $50 per PH/s/day throughout Q2, continuing its post-halving slide.
- With difficulty rising, fees stagnant, and Bitcoin trading mostly sideways, older ASIC fleets have been forced offline.
Analysts expect hashprice to remain range-bound between $37–55 per PH/s/day through 2028 unless BTC rallies far faster than hashrate growth.
A Structural Shift: AI Outbids Bitcoin
For the first time in Bitcoin’s history, miners are being priced out of their own infrastructure.
AI’s superior economics, hyperscaler deal flow, and the rising cost of industrial mining are pushing the industry into a permanent transformation.
The Bitcoin network remains strong, where hashrate is still climbing, but the business of mining is being rewritten fast.
This puts miners at an impasse, to either go big into AI, or go remote into stranded power.
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Here’s a summary of more US crypto news to follow today:
- Yi He appointed Binance co-CEO amidst legal and regulatory challenges.
- Kevin Hassett as Trump’s Fed pick: How will his policy impact crypto in 2026?
- Ethereum Fusaka goes live today: Can it trigger a Pectra-like rally?
- Is Bitcoin ready to end its 5-week downtrend or face rejection at $95,000?
- Vanguard ‘degen effect’ fuels 10% surge for Bitcoin in explosive rebound.
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- Binance marks 3 altcoins for delisting: Everything you need to know.
- V-shape bounce, rare Bitcoin signal, $13 billion Fed shock: What’s coming?
Crypto Equities Pre-Market Overview
| Company | At the Close of December 2 | Pre-Market Overview |
| Strategy (MSTR) | $181.33 | $185.83 (+2.48%) |
| Coinbase (COIN) | $263.26 | $269.39 (+2.33%) |
| Galaxy Digital Holdings (GLXY) | $25.36 | $25.90 (+2.13%) |
| MARA Holdings (MARA) | $11.91 | $12.27 (+3.02%) |
| Riot Platforms (RIOT) | $15.22 | $15.55 (+2.17%) |
| Core Scientific (CORZ) | $15.82 | $16.03 (+1.33%) |
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