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IREN Leads the Bitcoin Mining Sector in 2025 as Bitdeer Faces a Year of Losses - Crypto Economy
TL;DR
The year 2025 marked a clear turning point for Bitcoin mining, as companies that diversified into artificial intelligence (AI) and high-performance computing (HPC) infrastructure far outperformed traditional mining operators. Meanwhile, firms that remained solely focused on Bitcoin lagged behind, pressured by weaker earnings, execution challenges, and delayed technology transitions.
Bitcoin, priced around $87,346, ended the year down 7%, contrasting with gold, the S&P 500, and technology stocks, which all reached record highs. This macro backdrop forced mining firms to seek profitability beyond Bitcoin block rewards, leading to a wave of diversification into AI-driven services.
AI Diversification Drove the Top Performers
IREN (IREN) emerged as the undisputed leader of 2025, posting an impressive +300% year-to-date gain. The surge came from major GPU cloud deals and Microsoft’s strategic backing, allowing the company to reposition itself as a hybrid infrastructure provider serving both crypto and AI workloads.
Cipher Mining (CIFR) also delivered strong results, rising +230% after expanding its AI hosting partnerships with Fluidstack. Likewise, Hut 8 (HUT) climbed approximately +139%, supported by a $7 billion, 15-year lease agreement for 245 megawatts (MW) at its River Bend data center in Louisiana.
Bitcoin-Focused Miners Lose Ground
In contrast, the largest Bitcoin-heavy miners struggled through 2025. Marathon Digital (MARA), which holds 53,250 BTC, dropped 44% year-to-date. CleanSpark (CLSK), with 13,011 BTC, and Riot Platforms (RIOT), holding 19,324 BTC, posted modest gains of 16% and 32%, respectively, after entering AI-related initiatives late in the cycle.
Core Scientific (CORZ) remained independent after rejecting a $9 billion all-stock takeover bid from CoreWeave in October. The decision signaled confidence in its long-term value as demand for AI infrastructure continues to expand. Still, its shares advanced only 9% this year.
Meanwhile, Bitdeer Technologies (BTDR) ranked as the sector’s weakest performer, down about 50%. The company’s shares plunged following its Q3 earnings report, which revealed higher-than-expected net losses and a delay in its ASIC chip program, raising doubts about its AI expansion timeline.
A Year Defined by Adaptation and Execution
Across the mining landscape, the data point to a decisive pattern: miners integrating AI and HPC capabilities consistently outperformed pure Bitcoin operators.

The year’s results reaffirm a broader truth in the post-halving era—holding Bitcoin alone is no longer enough to guarantee growth. Success now depends on operational adaptability, technological reinvestment, and the ability to capture value across emerging digital infrastructure markets.
By year-end, miners like IREN, Cipher, and Hut 8 had established themselves as the new industry benchmark, while laggards such as Bitdeer faced pressure to modernize or risk falling further behind in an increasingly competitive, data-driven mining sector.