The cumulative decline in miners' revenues has prompted companies to seek new ways to monetize and technical solutions based on their capabilities. Some Bitcoin miners have started to invest in the development of decentralized financial infrastructure based on the main cryptocurrency, while others are considering artificial intelligence (AI) as one of the options for utilizing computational power.

The situation is complicated by the fact that the overall level of computational power used in the Bitcoin mining process has increased to 762 EH/s (exahashes per second), making it approximately 20% more difficult to mine the main cryptocurrency. This means that the same amount of equipment used in June now yields, on average, 20% less Bitcoin.

Of the list of 25 public mining company stocks, only 10 have shown positive dynamics since the beginning of the year. According to the Hashrateindex service, which tracks miners' stocks, the prices of shares for 15 companies have fallen, with declines ranging from 7% to 72%. Seven companies managed to show an increase in share value from 16% to 56%. Only three companies were able to show more significant price increases: Iris Energy — 82%, Hut 8 Mining — 125%, TeraWulf — 216%.