Author: Liam 'Akiba' Wright
Compiled by: Deep Tide TechFlow
Deep Tide Guide: By hash rate scale, Bitdeer is the largest Bitcoin miner in the United States. This week, it completely liquidated its entire BTC treasury—from 2,017 to zero. Simultaneously, the company completed a $325 million convertible bond financing and an equity offering. This is not an isolated event: the hashprice is approaching the breakeven line for many miners, and a structural shift is quietly occurring, turning miners from "HODLing machines" into "operational machines fueled by BTC."
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Bitdeer, the largest Bitcoin miner in the U.S. by hash rate scale, completely emptied its BTC ledger this week.
The company's BTC treasury balance now shows 0—it sold 189.8 newly mined BTC and liquidated 943.1 BTC from its reserves.
For mining companies, holding Bitcoin is like pressure in a pipeline: some flows out as income, some remains in the treasury as a store of value and a buffer. The state of this buffer reflects management's judgment of the road ahead.
Bitcoin hashrate ranking
Source: bitcoinminingstock.io
Bitdeer's buffer has been reset to zero in one go, raising the question: Why is this miner in such urgent need of cash? And how does it view the next quarter?
In the mining industry, bills come in fiat—electricity, hosting fees, salaries, parts—while revenue comes in Bitcoin. Therefore, every treasury policy is essentially a statement about timing, risk, and access to capital.
This weekly report has a second layer of meaning. Bitdeer's balance sheet still showed a substantial BTC holding at the end of the year—in the announcement on December 31, 2025, the company disclosed "Bitcoin held: 2,017."
The shift from a four-figure holding to a weekly update showing zero tells a story of pace, cash conversion, governance models, and the entire narrative of a business that constantly reinvents itself.
Taken together, this weekly report presents a company actively choosing certainty—converting a shrinking (in dollar terms) reserve into operational liquidity and adjusting its risk exposure to resemble a utility company more than a HODLing account. This is where the term "capitulation" comes in: it describes what happens when the profit margin gauge approaches the red line—the treasury transforms from a strategic reserve into fuel.
Based on weekly data, Bitdeer sold approximately 1,132.9 BTC (943.1 from reserves plus 189.8 newly mined). At the $60,000 to $70,000 range displayed on Bitdeer's mining insights page, this represents about $68 million to $79 million in liquidity—enough to make a material impact in a miner's cash cycle and enough to signal a shift in stance.
Treasury Line Item Meets Financing Calendar
This BTC sale coincided with what appears to be a deliberate capital markets restructuring. Bitdeer announced the pricing of upsized $325 million, 5.00% interest, convertible senior notes due 2032, along with a concurrent registered direct offering priced at $7.94 per share.
The expected uses of the funds include: a capped call transaction, repurchasing $135 million of the 2029 convertible notes, and funding data center expansion, HPC and AI businesses, ASIC R&D, and working capital.
This series of actions tells you where the money is intended to go and what risks the company is willing to bear along the way.
Convertible notes and capped calls are financial plumbing—they wrap volatility, trading upside for survival space, aiming to keep the gears turning while revenue catches its breath. A miner liquidating its BTC holdings in the same time window as completing financing and debt restructuring sends a signal: a preference for controllable funding channels and a focus on building infrastructure that can consistently generate orders, hash rate, and contracts.
This logic aligns with the broader 2026 narrative—miners increasingly positioning themselves as "energy-to-compute" enterprises, with Bitcoin as one revenue stream and AI and HPC as another capital-intensive destination.
VanEck's 2026 outlook sees this transition as both an opportunity and a pressure point for the mining industry, predicting consolidation as balance sheets absorb growth costs.
Hashprice Sets the Pace, Forward Curve Sets Expectations
Failure in mining rarely ends with a bang; it's a drift, a tightening, a series of small forced decisions that culminate in a big one. The industry's profit margin gauge is the hashprice—revenue per unit of hash rate—and recent readings explain why treasuries must be liquidated.
Luxor's latest Hashrate Index report places the dollar hashprice at $34.05 per PH/s per day, down about 4% week-over-week, and points out that for many miners, the current hashprice is near breakeven, depending on their respective cost structures and machine types.
The forward market prices an average of about $28.73 per PH/s per day over the next six months—this lower expectation acts like gravity, pulling on every treasury policy.
Difficulty is the second knob, adjusting the denominator, which can swing rapidly when weather, outages, or power curtailments take machines offline.
Bitcoin experienced a record 11.16% difficulty drop to 125.86T, followed by a record rebound to 144.40T. The next adjustment is expected to move lower in early March. For miners planning capital expenditures and liquidity on a weekly and monthly basis, this pattern is like a whipsaw.
Bitdeer's own dashboard reflects the same situation—Bitdeer lists the network hash rate at about 1,022 EH/s, difficulty at about 144.4T, and shows "Earnings per TH/s Day" as $0.0289. Miners must survive in the space defined by these numbers and choose where to absorb volatility: the treasury, the debt stack, or growth plans.
Capitulation Arrives First in Accounting, Then in Consolidation
When traders talk about "capitulation," they imagine a waterfall—a sudden flush that zeroes the books. Capitulation in mining often arrives in the form of ledger entries and financing terms: selling coins, cutting reserves, pricing convertible notes, issuing equity, and weaker operators being forced to merge or shut down.
Bitdeer's moves this week fit a narrative of using treasury liquidation as a financing bridge—converting BTC into cash to support larger-scale construction and a reshaped liability structure. This includes channeling proceeds into capped calls, repurchasing existing convertible notes, and funding data centers, HPC, AI, ASIC R&D, and working capital. Companies following this script are treating Bitcoin as inventory that can be converted into concrete, chips, and contracts.
Luxor's Hashrate Index forward market pricing of about $28.73 per PH/s per day implies that margin pressure will persist, and this pressure often pushes miners toward one of three exits: sell BTC, sell equity, or sell the business itself.
VanEck's outlook characterizes 2026 as a consolidation phase, pointing directly to financing choices—dilutive convertibles, treasury sales at weak prices, and the divergence between operators capable of running Bitcoin mining and AI compute simultaneously and those that can only sustain one track.
This is why Bitdeer emptying its reserves could be the canary in the coal mine. This event is both a case study and a warning label. A miner can maintain exposure to Bitcoin through ongoing operations while holding fewer actual tokens; it can also reposition itself as an infrastructure company, managing Bitcoin price risk elsewhere.
If the entire industry repeats this trade, 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 one-week liquidation can be timing; a sustained pattern over months implies a new treasury doctrine. The most useful signal will be the updates in the coming weeks—the same "BTC Held" line, similarly separating company holdings from customer deposits.
Second, cost of capital. The terms of convertible and equity financing show a company is building a survival moat, and when hashprice tightens, that moat becomes a competitive weapon. Under stress, miners with lower funding costs are buying time; those with higher costs are selling coins, equity, or assets.
Third, the margin backdrop. Luxor's Hashrate Index places hashprice near the breakeven line for many miners, wild difficulty swings show how quickly the denominator can move, and the network is still adjusting. Miners build on these shifting foundations, and their treasury is the shock absorber.
The cleanest read on this week is procedural: miners follow incentives, and incentives flow through hashprice, difficulty, and financing terms.
Bitdeer turned reserves into cash, and it did so in the same week it adjusted its capital structure and clarified spending priorities—data centers, HPC, AI, and ASICs.
The entire industry can digest one company emptying its treasury, but the entire industry must also confront this pattern: a mining ecosystem is taking shape that views Bitcoin as throughput rather than hoard and treats balance sheet exposure as an adjustable knob based on the cost of maintaining operations.








