Core Scientific Takes a Hit with $79.8M Revenue: Colocation Shines Amid Mining Struggles
Core Scientific's Q4 2025 earnings paint a mixed picture with revenue dropping to $79.8M, but a 268% surge in colocation revenue stands out. As BTC mining faces pressure, Core pivots to hosting services.
Core Scientific just released its Q4 2025 earnings, revealing a mixed bag of results. Revenue tumbled to $79.8 million from last year's $94.9 million, missing the forecast by a significant margin. The firm posted a per-share loss of $0.42, way beyond the expected $0.08. But it's not all doom and gloom. Colocation revenue exploded by 268% to hit $31.3 million, up from just $8.5 million a year ago.
What's happening here? The BTC mining sector's feeling the squeeze. Falling BTC prices and rising energy costs are a one-two punch to self-mining margins. Core Scientific isn't alone in this struggle. Many miners are pivoting towards AI and high-performance computing data centers. It's a necessary shift. Digital asset self-mining revenue dropped to $42.2 million, fueled by a 57% decline in BTC mined. Gross profit rose to $20.8 million, up from $4.8 million the previous year. Yet, they recorded a negative Non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA of $42.7 million.
CEO Adam Sullivan emphasized the company's shift from solely mining to offering hosting and colocation services. With a 1.5-gigawatt pipeline of leasable capacity, Core is betting big on this strategy. They ended the year with $533.4 million in liquidity, including $311.4 million in cash and $222 million in BTC holdings. It's a strategic pivot they're banking on for sustainable growth.
The takeaway? The BTC mining game is changing, and Core Scientific's adapting. The miners focusing on diversified services will stand a better chance. The ones clinging to old models? They'll get left behind.
Key Terms Explained
A company's profits, typically reported quarterly.
How easily an asset can be bought or sold without significantly affecting its price.
Borrowed money used to increase trading position size.
Using computational power to validate transactions and create new blocks on proof-of-work blockchains.