Concentration of AI stocks inside S&P 500 hits dot-com bubble peak

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The 10 largest AI stocks now make up about 41% of the S&P 500, according to a BofA Global Research chart circulated online.

That puts the AI basket at the same concentration level that tech and telecom reached around the dot-com peak. The BofA chart put the Nifty Fifty at 40% in the 1970s and Japan at 44% in the late 1980s.

The comparison turns a stock-market concentration warning into a stress test for a corner of crypto that has spent the past year selling investors a new identity.

The market concentration is the stress trigger. Miner disclosures and mining reports supply the exposure map.

Public Bitcoin miners increasingly trade as hybrid infrastructure companies with BTC exposure. Many have signed AI or high-performance computing contracts, raised capital for denser data centers, converted premium power sites, or shifted investor attention toward long-term lease economics.

If the AI infrastructure premium fades, those companies face a different kind of pressure. The risk moves from hashprice alone into debt, contract durability, construction execution, and equity multiples.

At the same time, Bitcoin gets a second-order test. A weaker AI buildout could ease the scramble for power, rack space, interconnections, cooling equipment, and GPUs.

That would hurt miners whose new valuations depend on AI growth, while possibly helping remaining miners if scarce infrastructure becomes easier to secure.

Latest Bitcoin data proves BTC miners need price to retake $80k to stop lure of $4B in AI revenueLatest Bitcoin data proves BTC miners need price to retake $80k to stop lure of $4B in AI revenue
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Yet top 10 public miners could earn $4.7B–$9.3B from BTC vs up to $4.1B in long-term AI contracts, reshaping Bitcoin’s security base.

Apr 18, 2026 · Liam ‘Akiba’ Wright

Miners Have Repriced Themselves Around AI

The miner pivot is now measurable in revenue forecasts. A projected revenue mix cited by S&P Global Market Intelligence showed listed miners including IREN, Riot Platforms, Core Scientific, HIVE, Cipher, and TeraWulf shifting into AI and HPC workloads.

The projected revenue mix is already large enough to change how these companies are assessed.

Visible Alpha expected HPC to account for 71% of 2026 revenue at IREN and Core Scientific, 70% at TeraWulf, 34% at Cipher, 15% at HIVE, and 13% at Riot.

That spread shows the sector has split into cohorts. Some miners are becoming data-center operators with Bitcoin exposure.

Others are preserving mining as the core business while keeping AI optionality at sites that have power and grid access.

The scale shows up in miner economics. Public miners have announced more than $70 billion in aggregate AI/HPC contracts, according to CoinShares.

The firm also said WULF, Core Scientific, Cipher, and Hut 8 are effectively becoming data-center operators that still mine Bitcoin.

That changes the market link from an AI stock selloff. A falling AI multiple would flow through miner equities because investors have assigned value to the HPC pipeline.

Lower AI demand would also pressure the financing case for projects built around long-duration tenants, higher-density cooling, and premium grid positions.

Mining margins would still depend on BTC price and difficulty, but the equity case would have another variable.

The leverage data points in the same direction. CoinShares said several miners had taken on large debt loads for AI buildouts, including $3.7 billion in convertible notes at IREN, $5.7 billion in total debt at WULF, and $1.7 billion in senior secured notes issued by Cipher.

CryptoSlate has separately tracked how miners have been funding the AI pivot with debt while selling BTC. Put simply, the AI pivot has added a credit cycle to a business that already lived with a Bitcoin cycle.

Bitcoin miners start funding pivot to AI with debt while selling BTC to stay liquidBitcoin miners start funding pivot to AI with debt while selling BTC to stay liquid
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CoinShares’ latest mining report suggests the biggest shift is that stressed miners are selling coins, stronger operators are pivoting into AI, and listed mining stocks are becoming less pure Bitcoin proxies than many investors assume.

Mar 26, 2026 · Gino Matos

The table mixes 2026 revenue estimates, 2025 company disclosures, and contract updates, so each row signals exposure across different time horizons.

MinerAI/HPC exposure signalRepricing pressure point
Core ScientificVisible Alpha projected 71% HPC revenue share in 2026CoreWeave delivery, customer-funded capex, conversion execution
TeraWulf522 critical IT MW under long-term leasesFinancing, tenant timelines, credit-enhanced contract delivery
IRENAI cloud ARR target above $500 million from 23,000 GPUsGPU contract duration, utilization, equipment economics
Riot600 MW Corsicana AI/HPC evaluationValue of using premium power for AI versus mining
CipherVisible Alpha projected 34% HPC revenue share in 2026Debt-funded HPC buildout and site monetization

Infographic mapping AI and HPC exposure among listed Bitcoin miners, including revenue share estimates, contracts, power commitments, and balance sheet risk points.Infographic mapping AI and HPC exposure among listed Bitcoin miners, including revenue share estimates, contracts, power commitments, and balance sheet risk points.

Cipher’s rebrand toward HPC adds another example of the shift. TeraWulf’s Fluidstack expansion shows how miners have paired large power portfolios with AI tenants and credit support.

The Risk Is In The Sites, Contracts, And Capital Stack

Core Scientific is the cleanest example of the shift from mining sensitivity to infrastructure execution. In its fourth-quarter 2025 results, the company said it had energized about 350 MW under its CoreWeave contract and remained on track to deliver about 590 MW by early 2027.

It also reported that Q4 colocation revenue rose to $31.3 million from $8.5 million a year earlier, while digital asset self-mining revenue fell to $42.2 million from $79.9 million.

That is the pivot in operating form. Power and buildings once tied mainly to Bitcoin production are being monetized through colocation.

Core Scientific also said $226.2 million of its $279.2 million in fourth-quarter capital expenditures was funded by CoreWeave under existing agreements. That customer funding reduces some capital strain, but it also shows how deeply the buildout depends on an AI tenant’s growth path.

The conversion has accounting complexity as well. Core Scientific said it was restating prior financial statements after identifying improper capitalization of assets committed to demolition during facility conversion from mining to HPC colocation infrastructure.

The issue was company-specific, but it illustrates a broader point. Moving from mining halls to high-density AI infrastructure goes beyond marketing language.

Core Scientific’s canceled CoreWeave merger agreement shows that AI-linked value already sits inside shareholder decisions.

CoreWeave’s 2025 Form 10-K adds counterparty context, including large contracted power commitments and disclosed risks tied to AI demand.

The miner exposure is therefore linked to both site delivery and the financial health of the AI cloud ecosystem.

TeraWulf shows the same shift at a larger contracted scale. In its full-year 2025 results, the company reported long-term data center lease agreements totaling 522 critical IT MW, more than $12.8 billion in long-term credit-enhanced customer contracts, and $6.5 billion in long-term financings.

It said HPC hosting had become its primary growth engine while it continued to operate legacy mining infrastructure opportunistically.

CoinShares reported that WULF mined 262 BTC in Q4 alongside $9.7 million in HPC lease revenue. The same report said WULF’s cost-per-BTC figures were distorted by the company’s transition, including interest, SG&A, and depreciation linked to the new infrastructure base.

That distinction is crucial. Once a miner becomes an AI infrastructure company, per-BTC cost metrics can distort the business unless the balance sheet is separated from the remaining mining fleet.

Riot’s Corsicana decision shows how AI optionality can alter Bitcoin’s capacity path before a final AI contract even exists. The company’s Corsicana update said it was evaluating AI/HPC uses for about 600 MW of remaining power capacity, halting a previously announced 600 MW Phase II Bitcoin mining expansion, and cutting expected year-end 2025 self-mining capacity from 46.7 EH/s to 38.4 EH/s.

IREN adds a different exposure type. Its October 2025 AI cloud update targeted more than $500 million in annualized AI cloud revenue from 23,000 GPUs by the end of Q1 2026, with 11,000 GPUs contracted for about $225 million of ARR on average two-year terms.

That creates a faster repricing channel than long-term colocation. GPU cloud economics can shift as hardware supply, utilization, and customer budgets change.

Power Scarcity Sets Bitcoin’s Side Of The Trade

The Bitcoin side of the trade is less direct. A weaker AI infrastructure cycle would pressure miners with AI exposure first through equity value, funding cost, and contract expectations.

Bitcoin’s network would feel the change through the industrial base that competes for the same power and sites.

The AI-mining link is physical. Bitcoin mining remains the larger aggregate revenue pool in key BTC price scenarios, while AI has become an immediate economic risk to the network’s industrial security base.

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