Crypto World
AI’s Role in Reshaping Miner Strategy: Is It the Way Out?
Bitcoin mining is increasingly becoming less about pure exposure to BTC price moves and more about building a business around electricity, compute supply chains, and AI-related infrastructure. The change is being reinforced by signals from outside crypto, including a report that Nvidia is seeking to raise $20 billion through a bond sale to fund additional AI expansion.
At the same time, other parts of the industry are showing resilience or momentum. Tokenized real-world assets continue to grow even as the broader crypto market struggles, while Ripple is expanding its payments footprint in Africa through an investment in Flutterwave. Separately, former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried’s attempt to overturn his fraud conviction has failed, according to an appeals panel in Manhattan.
Key takeaways
- A reported $20 billion Nvidia bond offering underscores the scale and durability of the AI investment cycle that some Bitcoin miners are positioning to support.
- Bitcoin mining firms are increasingly targeting AI hosting and high-performance computing opportunities as mining margins tighten.
- Tokenized real-world assets have surpassed $43 billion in total value of onchain financial assets, with Token Terminal citing a 37% increase over six months.
- Ripple’s investment in Flutterwave is another step in expanding stablecoin and payments infrastructure across Africa, where cross-border payments demand is rising.
- Sam Bankman-Fried’s appeal to overturn his fraud conviction was denied by a Manhattan appeals panel.
Nvidia’s bond plan highlights why miners are looking beyond hash rate
According to Bloomberg, Nvidia is pursuing a multi-part bond offering totaling $20 billion to finance future AI-related investments and refinance existing debt. The report also notes that the longest-dated bonds are expected to carry meaningfully higher yields than comparable U.S. Treasury securities, reflecting investor pricing for longer-duration risk and returns.
The relevance for crypto comes from how the economics of mining have been shifting. For years, many miners effectively operated as leveraged vehicles for BTC: mining profitability tended to track Bitcoin’s price and difficulty dynamics, leaving little room for a broader corporate identity. But with mining economics under pressure and power costs remaining a constant constraint, miners have been exploring a new angle—using their energy access and data center capabilities for AI compute workloads.
As Cointelegraph previously reported, the AI and data center trend has created practical opportunities for miners, since many of their facilities already support high-density computing. Companies such as HIVE Digital, Hut 8, CleanSpark, and TeraWulf have been positioning themselves as AI infrastructure providers, effectively treating energy and hosting as primary assets rather than secondary byproducts of mining.
While Nvidia’s funding plan is not a direct endorsement of Bitcoin mining, it is a reminder that major AI infrastructure buildouts tend to be multi-year investments. That duration matters: investors and operators typically need a longer runway when converting electrical and facilities capability into new revenue streams. The key watchpoint is whether AI hosting demand continues to absorb capacity fast enough to offset ongoing mining margin compression.
Tokenized RWAs keep expanding even as crypto sentiment softens
The tokenized real-world asset market continues to grow despite weakness across wider crypto markets. Token Terminal reports that the total value of onchain financial assets has surpassed $43 billion—an increase of 37% over the past six months—suggesting ongoing institutional and product-level experimentation rather than a purely speculative boom.
Tokenized funds dominate the category, accounting for nearly 80% of all onchain financial assets, though other forms are gaining attention. Commodities and tokenized stocks are gradually strengthening their presence, indicating that issuers are exploring more than one blueprint for bringing traditional asset exposure onchain.
The momentum is also being reinforced by longer-term projections from major banks. Standard Chartered expects tokenization to help drive decentralized finance toward a $2.7 trillion market capitalization by 2030, while Citigroup projects tokenized RWAs could reach $5.5 trillion over the same period. Even if exact outcomes differ, these forecasts point to a consistent theme: large financial institutions see tokenization as a structural opportunity that could eventually scale beyond pilots.
For market participants, the practical implication is that the RWA sector may behave differently from mainstream crypto narratives. Growth appears tied to product distribution and balance-sheet-backed use cases, which can be less correlated with day-to-day volatility than trading-heavy segments.
Ripple doubles down on African payments with Flutterwave investment
Ripple has invested an undisclosed amount in Flutterwave, one of Africa’s fastest-growing remittance and payments firms, in a deal valuing the fintech at $3.3 billion. The investment is expected to connect Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin, Ripple Payments platform, and XRP Ledger infrastructure with Flutterwave’s payments reach.
Flutterwave operates across 35 countries, and this partnership aims to strengthen Ripple’s stablecoin-based rails for cross-border transfers. The pitch aligns with the broader industry demand for faster settlements and lower-cost remittances, especially in regions where traditional correspondent banking can be slow or expensive.
This development also fits Ripple’s continuing strategy to deepen its presence in Africa. In October, Ripple partnered with South Africa’s Absa Bank to provide institutional digital asset custody solutions—another area where regulatory frameworks and institutional adoption tend to matter as much as technology. Taken together, the Flutterwave investment suggests Ripple is seeking both market access and the operational capacity to serve institutional and consumer payment flows.
Manhattan appeals panel rejects Sam Bankman-Fried bid to overturn conviction
Former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried failed to overturn his fraud conviction after a three-judge appeals panel in Manhattan upheld the verdict, finding that he received a fair trial. The denial comes after an appeal that challenged the conviction stemming from FTX’s collapse.
In an opinion attributed to Circuit Judge Barrington Parker, the court highlighted a central contradiction in Bankman-Fried’s conduct during the period leading to FTX’s failure: while he was publicly reassuring customers, investors, and regulators that customer funds were safe, the judge wrote that he was simultaneously using FTX funds for personal purposes, including spending on real estate, political contributions, and investments.
Bankman-Fried was convicted on fraud and conspiracy charges tied to the collapse of FTX and sentenced to 25 years in prison in 2024, according to earlier reporting. In addition, Cointelegraph reported that he formally applied for a presidential pardon from U.S. President Donald Trump, with the request appearing on the Pardon Attorney website in early June.
For observers, the outcome means the legal fight does not reset the underlying conviction. While additional post-conviction steps may still be possible in the future, this appeals decision closes a key chapter and keeps attention on the enforcement trajectory following one of crypto’s most consequential corporate failures.
Looking ahead, the most important signal to track is whether the AI infrastructure shift can convert into durable, measurable revenue for mining operators—especially as power and equipment costs remain the real battlefield. Meanwhile, tokenized RWAs will likely remain a key barometer for whether onchain finance can sustain growth through traditional finance’s adoption cycles, even when broader crypto markets cool off.
This article was originally published as AI’s Role in Reshaping Miner Strategy: Is It the Way Out? on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.
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