Key TakeawaysCryptocurrency mining firms confront approximately $50 billion in immediate capital requirements for AI infrastructure projectsOnly around 25% of contracted AI computing capacity has been physically delivered to clientsTotal capital requirements could balloon to $221 billion over the longer termMining operations with active AI infrastructure agreements command 10x+ valuation multiples versus 2–6x for traditional Bitcoin-focused minersVanEck identifies HIVE, IREN, KEEL, and Bitdeer as offering significant upside alongside elevated execution challengesCryptocurrency mining operations that have been announcing artificial intelligence partnerships over the last 24 months now confront a fundamental challenge: can they actually deliver on their commitments? Bitcoin miners face $50B funding gap pivoting to AI infrastructureVanEck reports bitcoin miners chasing AI revenue confront a $50 billion near-term funding gap and up to $221 billion in long-term capital needs. Only 25% of leased AI and high-performance computing capacity… pic.twitter.com/QFX8rUAuTY— NewsTongue (@NewsTongueX) June 16, 2026A comprehensive analysis from investment manager VanEck quantifies the magnitude of this hurdle. The industry confronts an immediate capital deficit approaching $50 billion, with aggregate long-term financing requirements potentially hitting $221 billion should current expansion roadmaps proceed as planned.VanEck research analysts Griffin MacMaster and Matthew Sigel note the industry narrative is evolving from partnership announcements to operational execution.“Execution, not signing, becomes the next premium,” their analysis states.Just One-Quarter of Committed AI Infrastructure Actually OperationalThroughout the mining sector, companies have activated roughly 25% of the artificial intelligence and high-performance computing infrastructure they’ve contractually committed to clients. VanEck anticipates this percentage will decline further before recovery, as major construction initiatives aren’t projected to accelerate until 2027 and 2028.Firms that fall behind on construction timelines face what VanEck characterizes as “structural de-ratings” from the investment community. The research team further emphasizes that most of these organizations lack meaningful experience constructing the sophisticated infrastructure AI clients demand.This strategic transformation began following the 2024 Bitcoin halving event, which significantly compressed mining profit margins. Numerous operators pivoted toward repurposing their electrical infrastructure for artificial intelligence applications, wagering that technology companies would pay premium rates for power and computing capacity compared to cryptocurrency mining economics.Core Scientific executed a multi-billion-dollar hosting arrangement with artificial intelligence company CoreWeave. TeraWulf, Hut 8, Iren, and Cipher Mining have all unveiled strategies to provide power and data center facilities to AI customers. Marathon Digital, Riot Platforms, and CleanSpark are implementing dual-track approaches that maintain Bitcoin mining operations while pursuing AI opportunities.Market Valuations Now Bifurcated Into Distinct CategoriesVanEck’s analysis establishes a distinct separation between organizations that have secured and activated AI infrastructure versus those still presenting future concepts.The critical measurement is “gross energized power” — actual megawatts a company has activated, not merely planned. Organizations with executed physical agreements, including Cipher Mining, Hut 8, and TeraWulf, are commanding valuations exceeding 10 times gross energized power. Marathon Digital and CleanSpark, which maintain stronger connections to Bitcoin mining, trade at merely 2–6 times that benchmark.Financing pathways differ substantially across companies. Organizations maintaining Bitcoin treasury positions — Marathon Digital possesses 35,303 BTC, CleanSpark controls 13,561 BTC, and Hut 8 maintains 13,696 BTC — can liquidate holdings to finance construction activities. Others lacking cryptocurrency reserves confront limited alternatives, including equity dilution or additional leverage.VanEck also projects client creditworthiness will gain importance moving forward. Mining companies servicing major, investment-grade cloud providers could secure more favorable financing terms and superior valuations compared to those partnering with emerging AI ventures.Notwithstanding Bitcoin declining approximately 24% since January, numerous mining equities have appreciated substantially. Riot Platforms has surged nearly 94% year-to-date. Cipher Mining has climbed roughly 62%.VanEck suggests the sector will eventually receive valuations resembling data center real estate investment trusts rather than mining operations, once AI revenue streams stabilize. Several companies, the analysis notes, could ultimately be acquired or restructured as REITs.Currently, the firm identifies the strongest revaluation opportunity in HIVE, KEEL, IREN, and Bitdeer — although these names simultaneously carry the most significant execution uncertainty. TeraWulf, Cipher Mining, and Hut 8 represent a more prudent approach, with cornerstone agreements already finalized.The post Bitcoin Mining Companies Confront Massive $50B Shortfall in AI Infrastructure Push appeared first on Blockonomi.