MARA Holdings shares fell more than 5 percent after the Bitcoin miner reported a $1.26 billion first-quarter net loss and detailed a major strategic pivot toward artificial intelligence.
“Bitcoin mining is not a legacy business we are moving away from. It is the operational foundation on which we are building,” CEO Fred Thiel said, framing the company’s new direction as an expansion rather than a retreat.
The company sold 20,880 Bitcoin for approximately $1.5 billion during the quarter. It used $1.1 billion of the proceeds to repurchase convertible notes, cutting its convertible debt by 30 percent from $3.3 billion to $2.3 billion. After the sales, MARA’s treasury holds 35,303 BTC, valued at roughly $2.84 billion, making it the fourth-largest public holder of Bitcoin.
The strategic shift away from pure-play mining comes as the company’s first-quarter revenue fell 18 percent year-over-year to $174.6 million. The net loss of $1.26 billion, driven by a 22 percent decline in Bitcoin’s valuation during the quarter, was more than double the $533 million loss from a year earlier.
A $1.5 Billion Bet on Energy and AI
The core of MARA’s transformation is the acquisition of Long Ridge Energy and Power, a 505-megawatt natural gas generation facility in Ohio, for approximately $1.5 billion. The deal, the company’s largest to date, includes the assumption of $785 million in liabilities and is expected to generate $144 million in annual EBITDA. The company plans to use the 1,600-acre site to develop a campus for AI and high-performance computing (HPC) workloads that could scale beyond one gigawatt.
Management stated that up to 90 percent of its non-hosted mining infrastructure could be reallocated to AI and HPC applications. Underscoring the pivot, MARA confirmed it will not pursue additional large-scale acquisitions of Bitcoin mining hardware.
Restructuring for a New Focus
Alongside the strategic pivot, MARA is implementing significant cost-cutting measures. The company is reducing its workforce by 15 percent, a move expected to generate $12 million in annual cost savings. The restructuring reflects a broader industry trend of Bitcoin miners like IREN and Keel Infrastructure diversifying into the energy-hungry AI sector to secure new revenue streams.
The announced changes signal a fundamental reshaping of MARA's business model from a pure Bitcoin miner to a digital infrastructure company controlling its own power assets. Investors will watch the closing of the Long Ridge acquisition in the second half of 2026 and the initial AI buildout in 2027 for execution on this new strategy.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.