From Mining Enterprise to Infrastructure Builder, Bitdeer Unpacks the Survival Logic behind BTC
Original Title: Largest US Bitcoin miner dumps entire BTC stash as margin pressure intensifies
Original Author: Liam 'Akiba' Wright, CryptoSlate
Original Translation: Deep Tide TechFlow
Deep Tide Summary: By hashrate, Bitdeer is the largest Bitcoin miner in the US. This week, it completely emptied its BTC treasury in one go—from 2017 to zero. At the same time, the company successfully completed a $325 million convertible bond financing and equity issuance. This is not an isolated event: the hashprice has approached the breakeven point for many miners, signaling a structural shift from "hodl machines" to "BTC-fueled operational machines" that is quietly taking place.
Full Article Below:
By hashrate, the largest US Bitcoin miner Bitdeer, completely emptied its own BTC ledger this week.
The company's BTC treasury balance currently shows as 0—it sold 189.8 newly mined BTC and liquidated 943.1 BTC from reserves in one go.
Holdings of Bitcoin by mining companies are like pressure in a pipeline: a portion flows out as revenue, a portion is kept in the treasury as a value store and cushion, and the state of the cushion reflects management's assessment of the road ahead.
Bitdeer's cushion was zeroed out in one go, raising a question: what is the reason for this miner's urgent need for cash? How does it view the next quarter?
In mining, expenses arrive in fiat—the electricity bill, hosting fees, wages, parts—while revenue arrives in Bitcoin. Therefore, every treasury policy is essentially a statement on timing, risk, and capital acquisition capability.
This week's report also carries a second-order meaning. Bitdeer's balance sheet still showed a significant BTC position at year-end—on December 31, 2025, the company disclosed holding "Bitcoin: 2,017 coins."
From a four-digit holding to a weekly update showing zero, the underlying story involves rhythm, cash conversion, governance models, and the evolution of the mining business.
Overall, this week's report presents a company that actively chooses certainty—a company that transforms a constantly shrinking (in USD terms) reserve into operational liquidity, adjusts its risk exposure to resemble that of a utility company more than a hodl account. This is where the term "capitulation" comes in: it describes what happens when the profit margin gauge approaches the red line—the treasury shifts from a strategic reserve to fuel.
Based on weekly data, Bitdeer sold approximately 1,132.9 BTC in total (reserve of 943.1 coins plus newly mined 189.8 coins). At an estimated range of $60,000 to $70,000 displayed on the Bitdeer Mining Insights page, this represents about $68 to $79 million in liquidity—enough to make a tangible impact in a miner's cash cycle and enough to signal a posture change.
The Treasury Line Meets the Financing Calendar
This BTC sale coincided with what appears to be a deliberately orchestrated capital markets move. Bitdeer announced the pricing of $325 million upsized, 5.00% coupon, 2032 maturity convertible senior notes and concurrently completed a registered direct offering priced at $7.94 per share.
The expected uses of the funds include: capped call transactions, repurchasing $135 million of 2029 convertible notes, and funding data center expansion, HPC and AI businesses, ASIC R&D, and operating capital.
This series of actions tells you: where the money wants to go and what risks the company is willing to take along the way.
Convertible notes and capped call options are financial conduits—they wrap volatility, trade upside potential for breathing room, and aim to keep the gears turning during revenue wheezes. A miner completing financing and debt restructuring within the same window of time as emptying their BTC treasury signals a preference for controllable funding channels, a preference for building infrastructure that can sustainably generate orders, hashrate, and contracts.
This logic aligns with the bigger narrative for 2026—a narrative where miners increasingly position themselves as "energy-to-hash" companies, with Bitcoin as one revenue stream and AI and HPC as another capital-intensive destination.
VanEck's 2026 outlook sees this transformation in mining as both an opportunity and a pressure point, expecting industry consolidation to follow as balance sheets absorb rising costs.
Hashprice Setting Pace, Forward Curve Setting Expectations
Mining failures rarely end with a bang; they are a drift, a tightening, a series of small decisions made under duress that eventually coalesce into a grand one. The industry's profit-rate gauge is the hashprice—earnings per unit of hashpower—and recent readings explain why the treasury must unwind.
The latest hashpower index report from Luxor places the USD hashprice at around $34.05 per PH per day, marking a weekly decline of about 4% and noting that for many miners, the current hashprice is nearing breakeven, depending on their cost structure and mining machine type.
Pricing in the forward markets shows an average of around $28.73 per PH per day over the next six months—a lower expectation that tugs at every treasury policy like gravity.
The difficulty is the second lever, adjusting the denominator, and it can swing rapidly when weather, shutdowns, or power restrictions take machines offline.
Bitcoin has seen a record 11.16% difficulty drop to 125.86T, followed by a record rebound to 144.40T. The next adjustment is expected to trend down in early March, a pattern that feels like a whip-crack reaction for miners planning capital expenditure and liquidity on a weekly and monthly basis.
Bitdeer's own dashboard reflects a similar scenario—Bitdeer lists network hashpower at around 1,022 EH/s, difficulty at around 144.4T, showing a "daily earnings per TH" of $0.0289. Miners must survive in this space defined by these numbers and choose where to absorb the volatility: in the treasury, in debt stacks, or in growth plans.
Surrender, First in Accounting Form, Then in Consolidation Form
When traders speak of "surrender," they envision a waterfall—a sudden cleanse that resets the ledger. Surrender in mining often takes the form of accounting entries and financing terms: coin sales, reserve cuts, convertible bond pricing, equity dilution, and weaker operators being forced to merge or shut down.
This week's Bitdeer operation aligns with a narrative of using the treasury as a financing bridge — converting BTC to cash to support larger-scale construction and liability restructuring. This includes: funneling proceeds into option trading, buying back existing convertible bonds, and funding data centers, HPC and AI, ASIC development, and operational expenses. Companies following this script are treating Bitcoin as inventory that can be converted into concrete, chips, and contracts.
The Luxor Hashrate Index forward market price is around $28.73 per PH per day, indicating that profit margin pressure will persist. This pressure often pushes miners towards one of three paths: selling BTC, selling equity, or selling the company itself.
VanEck's outlook pegs 2026 as a consolidation phase and directly points to financing choices — convertible bonds with dilutive effects, treasury sales during price weakness, and operators able to run both Bitcoin mining and AI hashpower tracks in parallel, distinguishing them from operators only able to maintain one track.
That's why Bitdeer's reserve liquidation may be the canary in the coal mine. This event serves both as a case study and a cautionary tale. Miners can maintain exposure to Bitcoin through ongoing operations while holding fewer actual tokens; they can also reposition themselves as infrastructure companies, shifting Bitcoin price risk management elsewhere.
If the entire industry repeats this transaction, the number of miners hoarding BTC on their balance sheets will decrease, and miner cash flows will become more sensitive to short-term profitability.
What to Watch Next
First, policy continuity. A week of treasury clearing can be a timing choice, while months of persistent patterns imply a new treasury dogma. The most telling signal will be updates in the coming weeks — the same line on "BTC holdings," now separating corporate holdings from customer deposits.
Second, capital costs. Convertible bond and equity financing terms reveal where the company stands in constructing a survival space, which turns into a competitive weapon when hashprice tightens. In times of pressure, miners with lower financing costs buy time, while those with higher financing costs sell coins, sell equity, or sell assets.
Third, profit margin backdrop. The Luxor Hashrate Index places hashprice near the breakeven point for many miners, and sharp difficulty swings show how quickly the denominator can move while the network is still adjusting. Miners building on these shifting grounds have their treasury as a shock absorber.
The cleanest interpretation of this week is procedural: Miners follow incentives, and incentives flow through hashprice, difficulty, and financing terms.
Bitdeer turned its treasury into cash, and during the week it did so, it also happened to reallocate its capital structure and explicitly laid out the priority of future expenditures—data centers, HPC, AI, and ASIC.
The entire industry can absorb a company emptying its treasury, but the entire industry must also reckon with this mode: a mining ecosystem that views Bitcoin as throughput rather than a store of value and treats the asset-liability exposure of its balance sheet as a tunable lever based on sustaining operational costs, is gradually taking shape.
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