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Marathon's $1B Bitcoin Sale Signals End of Mining's Profitability Era

As Bitcoin mining rewards collapse post-halving, the industry's largest miner bets on energy arbitrage from AI infrastructure rather than block rewards.

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Marathon Holdings (Nasdaq: MARA) sold 15,133 bitcoin for $1.1 billion over the past three weeks, deploying the proceeds to retire $1 billion of convertible debt at a 9% discount while signaling a decisive pivot away from pure-play Bitcoin mining.

The move is reflective of a broader industry reckoning: after the 2024 halving cut block rewards to 3.125 BTC per block, mining economics broke. Companies profitable at $50,000 per bitcoin now struggle to break even at $100,000 – yet Bitcoin trades around $69,000, and onchain transaction fees have collapsed as spot ETFs absorb trading volume.

CEO Fred Thiel framed the sale as "strengthening our balance sheet and expanding beyond pure-play Bitcoin mining into digital energy and AI/HPC infrastructure." The subtext is that energy capacity now commands higher margins from AI compute than from mining.

Marathon isn't alone. Core Scientific locked in a 12-year deal with AI cloud provider CoreWeave worth $10 billion in expected revenue. IREN is targeting over $500 million in annualized AI cloud services revenue for 2026. Even CleanSpark, once committed to pure mining, appointed a VP for AI data centers last October.

The capital reallocation highlights hard economics: AI companies will pay premium rates for power; Bitcoin mining can't. Marathon's move to retire debt while holding $2.3 billion in remaining bitcoin buys financial flexibility to chase higher-margin energy contracts.

For an industry that made its name accumulating Bitcoin, the pivot signals that infrastructure value creation, not asset accumulation, is now the growth vector.

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