Key Takeaways
- Core Scientific (CORZ) delivered fourth-quarter revenue totaling $79.8 million, significantly missing Wall Street’s $122 million projection, while per-share losses expanded to $0.42 versus the anticipated $0.08.
- Digital currency mining revenue plummeted approximately 50% compared to the previous year, reaching $42.2 million as Bitcoin trades near $68,000 — about 46% below its late-2025 high.
- The firm is aggressively transitioning toward high-performance computing and artificial intelligence colocation services, developing a 1.5-gigawatt pipeline of available hosting capacity.
- Core Scientific is growing its Texas presence with 430 megawatts of additional gross power infrastructure, complemented by 300 megawatts deployed at current Georgia and Texas facilities.
- CORZ shares closed Monday’s session down 2.8% at $16.49, dipping to $14.69 during extended trading before stabilizing — the stock maintains gains exceeding 13% for the year.
Core Scientific delivered fourth-quarter results that fell substantially short of analyst expectations, triggering a Monday selloff in CORZ shares.
The bitcoin mining company posted quarterly revenue of $79.8 million — representing a 16% year-over-year decline and missing analyst projections that ranged between $90 million and $122 million across various research firms.
Losses per share expanded to $0.42, significantly worse than the consensus forecast of $0.08.
Digital asset mining operations experienced the steepest decline, with revenue plunging nearly 50% from the prior year to $42.2 million.
Bitcoin currently hovers around $68,000 — approximately half the over $126,000 peak reached in late 2025. The digital currency closed 2025 just below $88,500 and has continued its downward trajectory.
This price collapse has compressed profitability throughout the mining industry. The April 2024 halving event, which reduced mining rewards by 50%, compounded challenges alongside escalating energy expenses and infrastructure investments.
Strategic Shift Toward Artificial Intelligence and HPC
Core Scientific has been systematically transitioning from pure cryptocurrency mining operations toward providing hosting and colocation services for artificial intelligence and high-performance computing applications.
Chief Executive Adam Sullivan noted the organization has “now past the halfway point on our existing builds and scaling our colocation platform into a 1.5-gigawatt pipeline of leasable capacity.”
The strategy includes concrete expansion initiatives. The company unveiled plans for Texas infrastructure growth, incorporating approximately 430 megawatts of gross power capacity at a single location.
Additional capacity totaling 300 megawatts has been deployed across other Georgia and Texas properties.
Sullivan highlighted the company’s “multi-geography footprint and proven execution” as drivers for expediting what the firm describes as RFS — ready for service — deployment schedules.
Fourth-quarter net income registered at $216 million, though this metric included a substantial $330.3 million non-cash fair value adjustment. Adjusted EBITDA reflected a negative $42.7 million.
Competitor RIOT Posts Mixed Results
Competing mining operation Riot Platforms announced fourth-quarter revenue of $152.8 million — climbing 7% year-over-year but falling below the anticipated $157 million.
A notable discrepancy emerged: an alternative LSEG estimate showed RIOT’s Q4 revenue at $647.4 million, a variance potentially attributed to varying treatment of engineering revenue and additional revenue streams across different analytical frameworks.
RIOT concluded Monday trading at $16.43, shifting less than 1% in after-hours activity to $16.28.
CORZ finished the standard trading session down 2.8% at $16.49. Extended-hours trading saw the stock decline to $14.69 before recovering to settle near unchanged.
For 2025 to date, CORZ maintains gains surpassing 13%.
