Investment analysis by Ruslan Averin — originally published at averin.com.
Riot Platforms rose 1.8% on June 12, and the move is a small marker on a large story: a bitcoin miner reinventing itself as an AI infrastructure landlord.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Friday move | +1.8% |
| New segment | $33.2M first data-center revenue (Q1 2026) |
| Anchor deal | 10-year AMD lease at Rockdale |
| Capacity ramp | 25 MW -> 50 MW contracted, option to 200 MW |
| Mining revenue | $111.9M, down from $142.9M YoY |
Why it moved
The headline number is small, but the category change is not. CEO Jason Les called Q1 "a definitive inflection point" — Riot's first quarter earning real money from AI hosting rather than mining bitcoin. The 10-year AMD lease at Rockdale, scaling from 25 MW toward as much as 200 MW, converts Riot's core asset — power and land at scale — into contracted, recurring revenue that does not swing with the bitcoin price. That is the whole pivot in one deal.
What it means for you
Mining revenue fell to $111.9 million from $142.9 million as bitcoin prices softened and the network hash rate climbed — exactly the volatility the AI pivot is meant to cushion. I look at RIOT as two businesses fused: a cyclical bitcoin miner the market knows how to discount, and an emerging AI landlord the market is only starting to underwrite. The re-rating, if it comes, is on the second one.
Bottom line: The AMD lease is the tell — Riot is monetizing power, not just hashes. I treat RIOT as an energy-and-real-estate AI play wearing a crypto-miner ticker, and the contracted megawatts are the metric to track.
More market analysis by Ruslan Averin at averin.com.
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