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MARA’s Bitcoin Loss Meets an AI Power Bet as Traders Look Past the Miss
12 May 2026
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MARA’s Bitcoin Loss Meets an AI Power Bet as Traders Look Past the Miss

New York, May 12, 2026, 08:07 ET

  • MARA shares ticked higher by roughly 3.6% ahead of the U.S. open, shrugging off a $1.3 billion loss for the quarter and revenue that came in below expectations.
  • This stock isn’t just reacting to Q1 profit—investors are dialed in on debt trimming, Bitcoin plays, and a punchier pitch around AI power.
  • Bulls point to limited available power and tenant flexibility. Bears, though, flag a lengthy buildout, significant Bitcoin exposure, and zero tolerance for missteps on execution.

MARA Holdings looked split on Tuesday morning, with shares at $13.39 before the U.S. market opened—up about 3.6%. Bitcoin hovered near $80,726, down a bit. Riot Platforms, CleanSpark, and Core Scientific all showed gains too, though not by the same amount. For MARA, the story is still Bitcoin mining, at least as far as the market’s concerned, despite management’s push for a broader energy-backed data infrastructure label.

The knee-jerk reaction to the earnings drop was swift, with shares sliding after hours Monday as MARA came up short on both revenue and profits. The regular-session rally was erased. Sherwood posted $174.6 million in revenue—well below the $181.9 million FactSet consensus—and booked a net loss of $1.3 billion, or $3.31 per share. Yet by morning, the stock bounced. Traders, it seems, weren’t buying into the quarter’s details; they were latching onto the underlying pivot.

The numbers didn’t offer much relief. Revenue dropped 18% from last year, mostly because Bitcoin’s average price slid, and MARA’s loss ballooned—thanks in large part to a hefty Bitcoin mark-to-market adjustment. That accounting move forces the company to reprice its holdings at current market value, so falling Bitcoin prices bruised reported results before any coins were sold. By the end of March, MARA held 35,303 Bitcoin, a steep slide from 53,822 at the close of December, following asset sales aimed at boosting liquidity and shoring up the balance sheet.

That balance-sheet maneuvering kept the chart from falling straight through support. Management said roughly 30% of its outstanding convertible debt—the kind that can convert into shares—has been retired. CFO Salman Khan added that MARA stopped tapping its at-the-market equity program after the end of 2025, relying instead on Bitcoin sales to fund operations rather than selling new stock. For a company frequently hit for dilution risk, that stands out.

There was a measured, almost guarded edge to the call. CEO and Executive Chairman Frederick Thiel zeroed in: “available, connected energy is the bottleneck on AI compute growth,” spotlighting the company’s power portfolio as the heart of its story. MARA posted a 33% jump in energized hashrate, reaching 72.2 exahash per second. But the underlying point? Mining forms the foundation now, not the full narrative. The Motley Fool

Long Ridge sits at the heart of this strategy. MARA’s $1.5 billion deal for Long Ridge Energy & Power hands it a 505-megawatt gas plant in Ohio, over 1,600 acres, plus a route toward more than 1 gigawatt in possible total capacity. Adjusted EBITDA—think a blunt measure of cash profit, before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization—is set at roughly $144 million annualized. The first phase of AI and critical IT infrastructure isn’t expected to go live until mid-2028, well beyond the next quarter.

Bulls see MARA moving past the old Bitcoin balance sheet rollercoaster, swapping it for less debt and fewer shares out there, plus a grip on power infrastructure—just as AI firms are hunting for sites ready to go. Rosenblatt’s Chris Brendler bumped his target up to $15 after the Long Ridge announcement, calling it “another major step forward.” He points out this isn’t another project “hoping for a grid connection”—the assets and grid access are already in place. That’s the straightforward upside: a real, plugged-in facility could command a premium versus basic mining operations. TipRanks

The bear argument isn’t subtle. MARA missed on revenue, posted a hefty loss, and remains tied to Bitcoin’s swings while it tries to fund a costly push into AI. MarketBeat reports a consensus “Hold” rating from 11 firms—seven buys, two holds, two sells—which says it all: bullish stories are out there, but conviction isn’t. MarketBeat

Macro conditions aren’t doing any favors right now. Prediction markets aren’t betting on rate cuts anytime soon—Oddpool’s got Kalshi showing a 97.0% chance, and Polymarket’s at 96.8%, that the Fed holds steady at June’s meeting. Polymarket’s own Fed dashboard puts “no change” at 97%, with a slim 2% shot at a quarter-point (25-basis-point) cut. The higher-for-longer rate regime isn’t trivial: data centers rely on financing, and riskier bets like miners would rather see looser money. Oddpool

The bid makes sense when you look at the peer group. Riot and CleanSpark stick to a pure Bitcoin-mining story for investors. Core Scientific leans harder into the AI infrastructure pitch. MARA, though, is straddling both sides—still loaded with Bitcoin for crypto upside, but also holding the power and land needed to make a case for a different valuation.

That’s what makes Tuesday’s move more than just a knee-jerk “earnings beat” rally. The stock is being repriced after a complicated quarter. Now traders are weighing if selling Bitcoin and rolling out the Long Ridge plan are steps toward a simpler balance sheet, or just an expensive entry into a tougher, riskier market.

Forget the AI slogans—the real test comes with signed tenants, locked-in megawatts, and clear financing numbers. And as long as Bitcoin holds up, that balance sheet gets room to maneuver during the buildout. For now, MARA trades on both fronts: its price still swings with Bitcoin every hour, but the power infrastructure story plays out over quarters.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors. Follow Khadija Saeed on Google News.

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