Bitcoin mining companies expanding into artificial intelligence and high-performance computing face a substantial capital challenge. According to new research from VanEck, the sector requires more than $50 billion in near-term funding to support announced AI infrastructure projects.
The estimate highlights the growing gap between miners’ ambitions and their available resources. While many companies have announced major AI initiatives, their projected capital expenditure requirements often exceed existing cash reserves and current balance-sheet capacity.
VanEck’s analysis found that several publicly traded miners face funding needs that significantly exceed their current market values.
The report identified Hive Digital among the companies with the largest capital requirements relative to its size. The firm’s planned AI gigafactory project would require substantial external financing beyond its current valuation.
Other miners facing large funding demands include IREN and Keel Infrastructure, both of which have announced aggressive expansion plans aimed at capturing growing demand for AI computing capacity.
The long-term picture appears even more capital intensive. VanEck estimates that total industry funding requirements could reach $221 billion as miners continue building infrastructure capable of supporting large-scale AI and high-performance computing workloads.
Recent activity from AI infrastructure providers demonstrates the scale of those requirements. CoreWeave, for example, has raised billions of dollars through debt and equity financing to expand its data-center footprint.
Meanwhile, the report also highlighted the divergence between announced deals and delivery. While several Bitcoin miners have announced AI pivots and disclosed deals to lease out their facilities to host HPCs, only a quarter of those deals have been delivered.
The VanEck report noted that the group has delivered only 25% of its leased capacity. Based on this, it believes focus should shift towards execution rather than deal announcements in delivery.
Interestingly, the report predicted that the second half of 2026 could see more deal announcements for Bitcoin miners pivoting to AI, with many forms in active discussions or advanced negotiations.
With clarity emerging around deals, VanEck analysts believe that the valuation framework for such miners needs to change. The focus should shift away from what is in the pipeline towards who can execute on time and on budget.
Based on its framework, which considered existing contracts, uncontracted capacity, Bitcoin strategy, and other factors, the report highlighted companies going all in on the AI business, such as HIVE, IREN, and Bitdeer, as having the widest range between bull and bear cases.
VanEck bottom-up sum-of-the-parts (SOTP) analysis. Source: VanEck
However, it noted that factors such as the tenant quality could have a major impact on the success of these firms. Thus, pivoting miners that can secure long-term contracts with investment-grade hyperscalers are in a much better position.
The VanEck analysts added that governance is also a major differentiator for the group. They particularly highlighted management experience and high insider ownership as positive valuation indicators.
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