I noticed an interesting pattern over the weekend: Riot Platforms in the first quarter of 2026 sold 3,778 bitcoins, earning about $289.5 million. At the same time, they mined only 1,473 BTC during that period. So, they sold 2.6 times more than they mined. At first glance, it looks like panic, but digging deeper — it’s more of a strategic move.



The key point: the company simultaneously increased its hash rate by 26% to 42.5 EH/s and reduced electricity costs by 21% year over year. Plus, they received $21 million in energy credits. This is not a sign that they are in trouble — it’s reinvesting capital into infrastructure. Riot is shifting from pure mining to hosting equipment and high-performance computing. They need money, so they sell some reserves.

And it’s not just Riot. During the same week, MARA Holdings, Genius Group, and Nakamoto Holdings collectively liquidated 15,501 BTC. Genius Group completely divested its reserves. The entire industry is clearly changing its approach — from passive accumulation to active treasury management. Previously, everyone just held, now miners use reinvestment as a tool to adapt to volatility.

Energy is the second half of the story. Costs are rising, especially after the escalation in the Middle East since February. Margins are shrinking across the industry. Less efficient operators are shutting down, which structurally benefits survivors like Riot — lower difficulty, higher block rewards.

Currently, the price of BTC is around $77.6k. If in the second quarter it doesn’t recover above $90k, Riot’s treasury could test the 14,000 BTC level within two quarters at the current pace. But considering that Bitcoin ETFs have recorded a cessation of outflows with inflows of $1.32 billion in March, institutional demand is partially absorbing this supply. Miners reinvesting in infrastructure seems like a rational move as long as conditions remain so volatile.
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