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Noticed something interesting happening in the mining space lately. A lot of the bigger bitcoin miners are quietly shifting their focus away from pure BTC production and pouring resources into AI infrastructure instead. This is actually a pretty significant shift from the traditional hodl mentality that dominated mining operations for years.
The thing is, when miners start diversifying their revenue streams like this, it often means more selling pressure on bitcoin. If they're not as committed to hodling their mined coins as they used to be, that changes the supply dynamics pretty meaningfully. Instead of accumulating BTC as a long-term store of value, they're treating it more like a cash flow asset that funds their AI operations.
What's driving this? The economics are pretty straightforward - AI infrastructure is generating serious returns right now, and the margins are attractive. Mining has become more competitive and capital-intensive, so for many operators, diversifying into AI makes more business sense than staying pure-play bitcoin.
The market implications are worth thinking about. We've spent years hearing about miners as the ultimate hodl crowd, the ones who believed so much in bitcoin that they'd hold through anything. But if that narrative is breaking down, and miners are becoming net sellers to fund their AI pivot, that's a meaningful shift in the supply picture. Less hodling from miners could mean more selling pressure, especially if this trend accelerates.
Personally, I'm keeping an eye on how this plays out. The mining sector has always been important for understanding bitcoin's supply dynamics. When that changes, it's worth paying attention to. You can track a lot of these trends through the data on Gate if you want to dig into the details yourself.