CleanSpark - Q1 2026
February 5, 2026
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Good afternoon. My name is Jeannie, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to CleanSpark's Fiscal Q1 2026 final financial results call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, press star one again. Thank you. Harry, you may begin your conference.
Harry Sudock (Chief Business Officer)
Thanks, Jeannie, and thank you for joining us today to review the first quarter of 2026 financial results for CleanSpark. We encourage you to review our earnings results press release, which was issued today and is available on our website. Our 10-Q will be filed shortly. A webcast replay and transcript of today's call will be added to our website once available. On the call today, I am joined by Matt Schultz, our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, and Gary Vecchiarelli, our President and Chief Financial Officer. Some of the statements we make today will be forward-looking, based on our best view of the world and our business as we see them today. The statements and information provided remain subject to the risk factors disclosed in our 10-K. We will also discuss certain non-GAAP financial measures concerning our performance during today's call.
You can find the reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures in our press release, which is available on our website. With that, it's my pleasure to turn it over to Matt.
Matt Schultz (Chairman and CEO)
Good afternoon, and thank you all for joining us. This quarter represents a meaningful step forward in CleanSpark's evolution into a digital infrastructure and data center development company, one that builds on the strengths of our mining operations while expanding the set of opportunities our assets can support. We continue to operate a large-scale, fundamentally sound Bitcoin mining business that generates durable cash flows and balance sheet strength. What is different today is what those cash flows now enable. CleanSpark is no longer a single-track business. We're building an infrastructure platform with multiple independently valuable earning streams, all anchored by scarce utility-grade power. Bitcoin mining funds the platform, AI monetizes it, and digital asset management optimizes it across all cycles. To frame how we think about AI development, we see three phases. First, securing scarce power and land. Second, tenant-driven technical and commercial alignment, and third, structured long-term monetization.
We are now firmly in the second phase across multiple assets. As a result, when we look forward, we increasingly see a company defined not just by hash rate, but by the quality, scale, and flexibility of its infrastructure, and by its ability to allocate capital into the highest return opportunities available at any point in the cycle. As we evaluate the opportunities for expansion into AI, we are seeing improving economics per megawatt, driven by scale, power quality, and contracting structures, even as capital intensity increases. Despite this evolution, Bitcoin mining remains foundational to our business. We are fully operational, hashing every day and generating strong cash flows from a scaled mining footprint of more than 50 exahash per second.
During the quarter, despite challenging Bitcoin price action and rising network difficulty, we generated more than $180 million in revenue at a gross margin exceeding 47%. Those cash flows allow us to fund growth deliberately. They give us the flexibility to hold assets in a fully monetized state while we complete diligence and commercial alignment, rather than being pressured into a speculative development. We built this strategy to perform across a range of market conditions, including lower Bitcoin prices, slower AI deployment, or tighter capital markets without forcing reactive decisions. In November 2025, we completed a $1.15 billion convertible offering as part of our strategic evolution.
Part of the use of proceeds was used to repurchase $460 million worth of shares, bringing total share repurchases to over $600 million since December 2024, resulting in approximately 20% of our shares outstanding being repurchased. Because we believe dilution is not a strategy, discipline is. Turning to our power and land strategy, historically, we built CleanSpark by acquiring and optimizing a large number of sub 100 megawatt sites. Those assets continue to perform well and have appreciated meaningfully as energized land has become increasingly scarce and valuable. As we evaluated the AI market, we recognized an opportunity to capitalize on the demand for larger sites. Until recently, Sandersville, with approximately 250 megawatts of already live power, was our only large-scale asset capable of supporting hyperscale workloads. That has changed.
In October 2025, we acquired 271 acres in Austin County, Texas, along with 285 MW of contracted power, fully approved by ERCOT, with certainty on energization and the potential gas capacity for significant behind-the-meter optionality. In January, we followed with a second development initiative in Brazoria County, Texas, supported by a transmission facilities extension agreement, enabling an initial 300 MW demand load, expandable to 600 MW. Together, these assets establish a Houston-area infrastructure hub with almost 900 MW of aggregate potential utility capacity, assembled intentionally to support multi-phase AI campus deployments. As we look ahead, we expect to move from portfolio formation into commercialization milestones. Those milestones will take different forms, site-specific announcements, development partnerships, and structured long-term offtake agreements.
But they all reflect the same underlying reality: our assets are being pulled into the AI market, not pushed. We believe that over time, as those options convert into contracted visible cash flows, the market will increasingly recognize the embedded option value in our power and land portfolio. At Sandersville, we further strengthened our position with the acquisition of a 122-acre parcel in direct proximity to our substation and power infrastructure. These additions were made in close consultation with a select group of potential counterparties. Importantly, these discussions are no longer theoretical. We are operating from tenant-driven specifications, not internal assumptions. We are now past initial screening and into advanced diligence across multiple sites, including power studies, cooling validation, and commercial structuring.
The decisions we are making today around substation design, cooling architecture, and campus layout are not reversible, and they reflect confidence in where demand is heading. What excites us about AI monetization is not just scale, but the duration, predictability, and capital alignment of those cash flows relative to traditional compute. Throughout this process, we are expanding responsibly. That means being infrastructure first, aligned with customer requirements, and disciplined in capital deployment. In this market, moving too fast is often riskier than moving deliberately, and we are intentionally optimizing for durability rather than velocity. As we plan this evolution, we have established an optimized operating model that allows us to continue running our mining infrastructure right up until load transition. When that transition occurs, we expect to redeploy miners elsewhere in our portfolio where they can continue to operate profitably.
Earlier, I said that Bitcoin mining will always be core to our business, and that's because it continues to provide us with a strategic advantage in power acquisition. That advantage is now translating directly into differentiated positioning in AI infrastructure. We have seen this movie before. The discipline that allowed us to scale mining profitably across multiple cycles is the same discipline we're applying here. Only now, with larger contracts, stronger counterparties, and materially longer duration cash flows. Before turning to Digital Asset Management, I want to briefly comment on the AI lease market. We believe there are meaningful second-mover advantages in AI infrastructure, similar to what we experienced in Bitcoin mining. Lease economics have continued to improve across multiple dimensions. Rates have risen, risk-sharing terms have become more balanced, and credit markets supporting these projects remain deep and constructive.
When negotiating large-scale contracts, we are balancing lease rates, delay provisions, capital structures, and counterparty quality to optimize the holistic return profile. Our goal is not to win a single deal, but to build durable, scalable relationships that monetize our growing portfolio over time. I also want to briefly touch on Digital Asset Management. DAM is not a trading function. It is a capital allocation and liquidity management capability with defined mandates and risk limits. During the quarter, DAM generated over $13 million in premiums and cash. That represents about 24% of normalized adjusted EBITDA and improving capital efficiency across our business. These results are process-driven and fully integrated into our broader financial framework. As we look forward, we see multiple paths to value creation unfolding in parallel.
Continued strength in our operations, increasing visibility into AI monetization, and disciplined balance sheet management that preserves strategic flexibility... With that, I'll turn the call over to Gary.
Gary Vecchiarelli (President and CFO)
Thank you, Matt. Let's dive right into the numbers for our fiscal Q1, 2026. For the quarter, our revenue grew year-over-year by approximately $19 million, an increase of almost 12%. Our Bitcoin production was relatively flat, but we saw revenues of almost $100,000 per Bitcoin in the quarter, compared to $84,000 in the same quarter last year. Our gross margins declined slightly from approximately 57% a year ago to 47% this quarter. This decline was mainly driven by the year-over-year increase in network difficulty. Power prices also increased marginally to $0.056 per kWh, up from $0.049 per kWh a year ago. However, this reflects our decision to continue hashing through higher cost, higher revenue periods than curtailing based solely on an arbitrary power price threshold.
This quarter, we recognized a net loss of approximately $379 million compared to net income of approximately $247 million a year ago. This change was driven primarily by mark-to-market adjustments to Bitcoin's fair value at the end of each respective period. Our adjusted EBITDA was negative $295 million, compared to positive $322 million a year ago, also driven primarily by mark-to-market adjustments. Turning our attention to the performance of the Q1 versus the immediately preceding Q4, revenues declined approximately $43 million or 19% to $181 million. This drop is primarily due to a combination of two external headwinds, rising network difficulty and softer Bitcoin prices.
Because of these pressures, we experienced some of the lowest hash prices in history during the quarter, underscoring the importance of having a fleet with high uptime and efficiency. quarter-over-quarter, our cost per kWh decreased marginally from $0.059 in Q4 to $0.056 in Q1, partially offsetting our 19% revenue decline. As a result, our gross margins remained healthy at 47%. With respect to our overhead expenses, it is important to note that the prior quarter includes approximately $25 million of expense related to separation from our prior CEO. As mentioned on last quarter's call, we do expect that our professional fees, payroll, and G&A line items will increase as we execute on our AI strategy.
Additionally, I want to underscore that the AI data center business comes with stable cash flows and high margins, both of which will help CleanSpark through the peaks and valleys of Bitcoin mining economics. Our adjusted EBITDA is -$295 million for this quarter, compared to $182 million for the Q4. It's important to note again that the difference relates to non-cash mark-to-market adjustments, for which the current quarter includes approximately $350 million of these charges. On a normalized basis, taking the mark-to-market adjustments into account, our normalized EBITDA would be $55 million or approximately 30% normalized margin for this quarter. This represents cash generated from our operations.
Bitcoin value as of our September 30 balance sheet date was approximately $1.5 billion, and as of December 31, it was $1.15 billion, which the difference is the non-cash mark-to-market adjustment of $350 million, which I mentioned earlier. Turning our attention to the balance sheet, you'll see our cash balance increased over $400 million compared to Q4. This is due to the $1.15 billion, 0% convertible transaction we closed in November. As you know, we used a portion of the proceeds to pay off the outstanding balances on our Bitcoin-backed lines of credit and also repurchased $463 million of stock. This left approximately $420 million of net cash proceeds, the majority of which we will still have on our balance sheet.
In addition to our cash balance, we had approximately $1.15 billion of Bitcoin value as of the end of Q1. Our total debt is approximately $1.8 billion, which, on a net debt basis, is approximately a 1.1 debt-to-liquidity ratio. Most importantly, the converts do not come due until 2030 and 2032, and numerous options remain available to us for capital. Also important to note is that our outstanding share count has decreased almost 20% in the last 15 months, as we have not issued a single share of equity on the ATM or other offering. To echo Matt, dilution is not a strategy, discipline is.
Turning our attention to our balance of over 13,000 Bitcoin, I want to point out that we are one of the first, if not the only company, which has scaled operations that is also using Bitcoin as a productive capital asset. On the last call, we discussed in detail our DAM strategy in its first full quarter. You may have also heard us previously talk about our crawl, walk, run approach, which I'm happy to say we're now fully in the walk phase. We're at full utilization of the portion of our Bitcoin balance we expect to use for yield generation, which is 40% or approximately 5,200 Bitcoin. Our DAM strategy generated $13 million in cash returns on the Bitcoin HODL during the quarter, where Bitcoin price was down mark to market.
I want to highlight several key numbers which speak to our core DAM strategies. We overlay a covered call derivative program on our monthly production and sales of Bitcoin, which resulted in an uptick of $7,700 or 8% per Bitcoin over the average sales price of approximately $97,200. Overall, the $13 million in total premiums also represents an annualized return of 4.2% on our average HODL balance, which surpasses our target of 4%.
... We accomplished this all within 6 months of our first trade. Importantly, this was all achieved by monetizing elevated volatility, especially in October, while keeping the average delta below 20. I also want to point out that we have added an additional tool to our treasury management tool belt. The basis trade is a market-neutral strategy that captures the difference between the forward price of Bitcoin and the spot price. Importantly, this strategy takes no price risk and generates returns from the same types of market structure dynamics that we noted in our thesis in the first place. This basis trade allowed us to put our cash balances to work and exceed the risk-free rate by almost 200 basis points, as we saw an annualized yield of over 5.5% on the cash allocated to the basis trade.
While these opportunities are cyclical, we will continue to be opportunistic based on market dynamics, filling out the flywheel we initially envisioned when we launched our DAM team. On a final note, I'd like to take some time discussing our capital strategy going forward, especially in light of our expansion into AI data centers. From a capital perspective, I'm confident that the capacity and appetite for financing an AI data center with a grade A tenant is strong. We saw a high-yield deal from our friends at Cipher, which priced at an attractive 6.8%, which is indicative of the quality of recent leases being signed and the capital available in this market. Their recent $2 billion bond had approximately $13 billion in demand, an oversubscription of 6x.
While we have not committed to one specific means of financing our AI data center builds, we are focused on building a capital stack, which minimizes dilution. This continues with the sale of monthly Bitcoin production to cover our OpEx. Between our current cash balance and capacity on the built Bitcoin-backed lines of credit, we have over $800 million of liquidity available without selling any of our Bitcoin HODL. This liquidity provides us optionality, and we will continue to use the lines of credit opportunistically in the marketplace for creative purposes. Matt spoke about our current efforts and where we are going, and we are excited to share on future calls, the relationships and ecosystem we are building, one that is a more fulsome approach than exists in the market.
While we are early in the innings of our AI data center journey, the market is moving quickly, and CleanSpark is responding decisively. Our conversations with grade A credit quality tenants are ongoing, and it is not a matter of if, but when. With that, I will hand it back to Harry to lead us in the Q&A.
Harry Sudock (Chief Business Officer)
Thanks, Gary. We will now open the floor to questions from the analyst community. Operator, please provide instructions and manage the queue for the Q&A session.
Operator (participant)
At this time, I would like to remind everyone to ask a question, press star, then the number one on your telephone keypad. We'll pause for just a moment to compile the Q&A roster. Your first question comes from the line of Mike Grondahl with Northland Securities. Please go ahead.
Mike Grondahl (Head of Equities and Director of Research)
Hey, guys. Thank you. I was wondering if you could talk a little bit about the demand environment you're seeing for HPC and maybe how that's changed in the last 90 or 100 days, and kind of what attributes are you looking for most in a leasing partner?
Matt Schultz (Chairman and CEO)
Hey, Mike, thanks for the question, and thank you for the recent initiation. We're glad to see Northland covering us. I can tell you that six months ago, when I reassumed the role of CEO, we entered a market where there was a lot of enthusiasm around signing a deal. And what we're now seeing is some of the punitive components of the early leases, such as, you know, losing a significant amount of revenue for a day-late delay on an RFS date and differing terms that are backstopped only at the site level rather than at the top co-level. It has given us an opportunity to really sit back and evaluate what's out there.
I can tell you that, you know, we, Gary, Harry, and myself, and some of our team attended the Pacific Telecom Conference in Hawaii, and the feedback that we received by presenting an end-to-end solution was very overwhelmingly positive. We've been very pragmatic about the assets that we've accumulated, the location, the distance away from fiber networks, the access to behind-the-meter generation, and as a result, we've now been entertaining multiple trillion-dollar balance sheet companies that are interested in long-term leases on some of these assets. So we're seeing the demand continuing to escalate. I might add, we saw Amazon earlier today talk about their commitment to invest $200 billion in AI infrastructure in 2026, exceeding the $140 billion estimated by the street.
So looking at the demand behind that, we feel very solid about it, and if the inbound inquiries and conversations we're having with hyperscalers are any indication, the fear of a bubble is highly overstated.
Mike Grondahl (Head of Equities and Director of Research)
Got it. And then maybe just as a follow-up, your three sites, Sealy, Sandersville, and Brazoria... would you say it's equal demand for all three, or is there one that sticks out amongst those? How would you handicap that?
Matt Schultz (Chairman and CEO)
I think probably the highest demand right now is Sandersville, quite frankly, because it's 250 MW. We already built a substation. It's already energized. The Sealy site, energization is Q1 2027 for the first 207 MW, so we're seeing strong demand there. And, you know, obviously, the next site has also been very appealing. But I would say that the data center environment in Georgia and the energized site are very compelling to the offtake clients.
Mike Grondahl (Head of Equities and Director of Research)
Great. Well, best of luck the rest of the winter and spring.
Matt Schultz (Chairman and CEO)
Appreciate it, Mike. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Brian Dobson with Clear Street. Please go ahead.
Brian Dobson (Brian Dobson is Managing Director of Disruptive Technology Equity Research)
Hey, good evening. Thanks so much for taking my question. So just as a quick follow-up, you know, you mentioned there have been some really positive CapEx comments from companies like Amazon. You know, to me, that signals rising demand for AI data centers. Would you say that that's indicative of demand, call it, across the sector from various hyperscalers that you're speaking with, or are people getting more cautious at all?
Matt Schultz (Chairman and CEO)
Yeah, I would say it's an emphatic yes. You know, just as a quick aside, Jeff Thomas, who leads our AI venture, has been in the office with us this entire week, and more often than not, he's excusing himself to go into his office and close the door to field an inbound inquiry. So I would say demand is escalating rapidly.
Brian Dobson (Brian Dobson is Managing Director of Disruptive Technology Equity Research)
You know, that's certainly good news. You know, I know, I know you guys mentioned that you're looking for a mix of, call it, quality and scalability among clients. You know, given construction commitments that you've already made, how confident are you that you'll be able to, call it, sign a contract in the relatively near future?
Matt Schultz (Chairman and CEO)
We're very confident, Brian. You know, I'll be honest with you, the delay in... I wouldn't even call it a delay. I mean, when we did this six months ago, and then we had our earnings call seven or eight weeks ago, we said that we would expect to sign a quality lease in less than a year, and I would say that that's highly accelerated. But the discipline that we're taking, you know, you look at some of the leases that other Bitcoin miners have put up, and they're very highly redacted in the public filings, and that's a result of the punitive nature of some of the delay provisions. So as we contemplate this, we're actually working on a basis of design with the offtake customer.
We're designing it in advance and then assuring that we can meet the delivery timelines to remove that potential overhang of failure to deliver risk. So being disciplined about this and building specific to the basis of design for the offtaker, including the implementation of the approved reference architecture from the chip manufacturers, will allow us to have that certainty to secure the supply chain before we enter into these commitments to ensure that we don't have that fail to deliver.
Brian Dobson (Brian Dobson is Managing Director of Disruptive Technology Equity Research)
Excellent. Excellent. Thank you for that additional color. And then, and then just one final one on Bitcoin mining, if I may. You know, given your efficiency, you're better positioned than most heading into the next halving. I guess, has your, has your thought process changed at all as far as operating Bitcoin mines, call it, in tandem with your, with your expansion into, into HPC?
Matt Schultz (Chairman and CEO)
You know, that's a great question, Brian, and, and what we've found is that as new energy sources are energized, some of these communities, especially the smaller communities, are incentivized to monetize those megawatts very rapidly. The challenge is to build a data center for a hyperscaler with the approved basis of design, and incorporating that reference architecture is a 12-month best case, 18- to 24-month kind of average case delivery timeline. We can use the infrastructure that we have for Bitcoin mining, like we did in Cheyenne, Wyoming, where we secured a 100-MW lease over a hyperscaler. We did that simply because we committed to start paying power bills inside of six months, not inside of a year and a half, and that makes a difference to these communities. So we'll continue to use Bitcoin mining as that tool.
You, you heard us talk about on the call something we haven't publicized yet because it wasn't material, and that is we have a 122-acre parcel adjacent to Sandersville. What does that mean? That means I can operate 11 exahash of profitable Bitcoin mining up until the day we cut the power over to support the data center for our end-use client. You know, we also, on the map of our projects, something that we haven't talked about, is a 15-megawatt site in South Dakota. The utility there had introduced a blockchain-specific tariff that, with an interruptible load, it gives us the lowest cost per kWh of almost any site in our portfolio. So that flexibility allows us to migrate that mining to a profitable location once we've spun up a data center behind it.
We see it kind of as a loss leader, but it makes money.
Brian Dobson (Brian Dobson is Managing Director of Disruptive Technology Equity Research)
Yeah. Excellent. Thanks for that color, and thanks again for answering all my questions, Matt.
Matt Schultz (Chairman and CEO)
Absolutely. Thanks, Brian.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Mike Colonnese with H.C. Wainwright. Please go ahead.
Mike Colonnese (Managing Director and Senior Crypto and AI Analyst)
... Hi, good afternoon, guys. Appreciate you taking my questions. Matt, first one maybe for you. I appreciate your comments on the HPC business with CleanSpark being in advanced discussions, or diligence stages rather, with potential tenants here, and that you're currently working on a basis of design. Curious, what milestones should we be on the lookout for next, and some of the expected timelines you see as we, come across the next couple of quarters here?
Matt Schultz (Chairman and CEO)
So I think, you know, the process when you're dealing with a hyperscaler is, you know, we could rush in and sign a lease so we could get a headline, and then we're facing potential losses for a failure to deliver. So as I mentioned in my prior comments, we're working towards that basis of design. And one of the things I think that is a key differentiator that's maybe gone a little bit under the radar, and that is, you know, we put out a press release announcing a MOU with Submer. Well, Mike, you've been around our company long enough that we don't ever make a material disclosure unless we've got a firm contract. And we felt that that was important as we head into some of these discussions, because Submer's been very successful in building a modular MEP.
So mechanical, electrical, and plumbing, all the fiber runs, everything according to the reference architecture required by the chipset manufacturers. So our solution will be to build the gray space, to build the tilt-up shell and then slot in the reference architecture. That also gives us flexibility. So if you have a hyperscaler that wants to modify from one particular type of chip to another, we have that modular approach. It also shortens the timeline because, you know, we've all heard the horror stories about some of our peers that have a couple of thousand tradesmen all working at the same sites in West Texas, and they're struggling to provide housing and food and bathroom facilities. We look at this differently.
We build, instead of a one-off data center that's stick-built, we build the shell according to the specifics required by the end customer, and then we build the MEP portion in a factory, so it's consistent and duplicatable and scalable, which is differentiated from anything else in the space. So it's important to us to establish all of those build parameters ahead of time, so when we put pen to paper, there's absolute certainty that we can deliver the product as expected on time.
Mike Colonnese (Managing Director and Senior Crypto and AI Analyst)
Helpful color. Matt, appreciate that. Gary, maybe one for you. Does this recent downturn in Bitcoin prices change your HODL approach at all? I know from covering the name for a while here, you guys have historically had a very dynamic, HODL approach, one that tended to adjust based on prevailing market conditions. So curious how you guys are thinking about the HODL stack here.
Gary Vecchiarelli (President and CFO)
Yeah. Hey, hey, thanks, Mike. Yeah, since you've been around a while, you know we built this business on optionality, so that option is still on the table if we wanted to, quote, unquote, "dip into the HODL" and part with some of those Bitcoin. I'll tell you that's not something we're planning on doing, even at these levels. We think that the strategy is still intact, and part of the hedge is for us really selling, you know, nearly 100% of our monthly operating production. So, as of right now, there's really been no change in that strategy. I'd also conversely say that we're not expecting to hold 100% of the operating Bitcoin production either, because that would mean that we'd run through our cash a whole lot quicker.
As we had mentioned, when we were raising the convert funds, you know, we expect to use the majority of those funds to expand in AI data centers because we think that's the future of the company.
Matt Schultz (Chairman and CEO)
You know, Mike, maybe to add just a little, another layer to the Bitcoin mining side. We at our last disclosure, we were at 16.07 joules per terahash, and Taylor and his team are actively deploying the 13.5 joule per terahash machines in the immersion-cooled containers in 5 different locations. So we expect our fleet efficiency to continue to improve. We in the last cycles, I mean, we've been through this a few times. We see the kind of washout of the sorting process, and the less efficient fleets tend to unplug. So we also believe that there's a very strong opportunity for us to organically grow a share of the network hash rate just by default, as other less efficient miners are forced to unplug.
Mike Colonnese (Managing Director and Senior Crypto and AI Analyst)
Great. Thank you for taking my question.
Gary Vecchiarelli (President and CFO)
Thanks, Mike.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Greg Lewis with BTIG. Please go ahead.
Greg Lewis (Managing Director and Energy and Infrastructure Analyst)
Yeah. Hi, thank you, and good afternoon, and thanks for taking my questions. And just thinking about, you know, the move forward in the HPC, you know, and I know Jeff joined the team a few months ago now. You know, Gary, you alluded to potentially higher SG&A over time as we kind of build out the team and get ready to, you know, pivot into this new business. Like, how should we think about costs and processes, and where are we in terms of... You know, we've seen other companies go out and build teams. Where, you know, and realizing we have a lot of capable, talented people already inside the company, how should we think about, you know, growth at the employee level here?
Gary Vecchiarelli (President and CFO)
Yeah. Hey, Greg, thanks for the question, and it's a great question. We get it quite often from investors. I'll tell you, it's hard to give guidance on that because, you know, while we have a plan to bring on a certain number of FTEs, the timing of when those hit is really what's going to drive what the numbers are going to be for the fiscal year. Additionally, we have optionality to where we can rent services, so if we need services from someone, we could bring in outside consultants or contractors to help fill that void while we're waiting to bring on the full-time talent.
... And there's, you know, that could be different than what it would be to bring on a fully burdened employee. So we're not prepared to give out numbers for that right now. I don't think it's anything, you know, that's material that's, you know, putting us at risk or anything. I think we've been pretty measured about bringing on people, right around the time we will need them, so I think you'll see that slowly uptick throughout the remainder of the year.
Greg Lewis (Managing Director and Energy and Infrastructure Analyst)
Okay, great. And then, you know, I think it's been understood that we were gonna acquire more land at Sandersville for, you know, at least a few months. And how does now owning that, you know, that additional land at Sandersville, does that go at all in changing the kind of conversation? You know, Matt, it seems like we're focusing on-- it seems like, you know, part of this call is you focusing on potential terms of some of these HPC contracts. And how does-- You know, I would think owning the land matters a lot. I guess my question is: Was not owning some of the land and potentially leasing it kind of a non-starter?
Harry Sudock (Chief Business Officer)
Hey, Greg, it's Harry. I think you're exactly right. So we view the closing of the land expansion at Sandersville a very orderly process in progressing the AI data center project there. It allows us to move into a very specific basis of design alignment exercise, which is underway, and it also brings a level of specificity to the compute and power ramp for the data center deployment as well, because there's complexity to these projects that extend beyond, you know, standing up the data center for RFS date. There's a lengthy commissioning process that the tenants typically take on in the context of the overall project life cycle, and being able to map out those timelines and those work streams in detail is critical as we move through the full commercial scope of the discussions.
They're, in many cases, governed by some of those technical pieces in the ramp process.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Stephen Glagola with KBW. Please go ahead.
Stephen Glagola (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Hi, thanks for the question. Can you maybe provide some insight into how ERCOT's proposed large load batch study process may impact the energization timeline for the Sealy site, as well as the approval and development schedule associated with your Brazoria County, Texas project?
Harry Sudock (Chief Business Officer)
Hey, Steven. Yeah, Harry again. Happy to do that. So I think the first piece of it is that the study process that ERCOT is proposing to roll out has not gone final yet. They're still in a comment period where they're taking member requests for how they want to influence that process, and how it's gonna be brought to market. So we're waiting to see kind of the final form of that. But given, you know, the early news there, we've had a lot of detailed discussions with a number of counterparties that we're working with there. That includes the substation developer, it includes the utility, it includes some of the political folks, and obviously some of the teams at ERCOT as well.
I think the assets that we have in the state are in very favorable position relative to this, this new piece of the process for a handful of reasons. The first is that the large load studies that have been done at Sealy, it's complete, and at the second location, it's in a deeply progressed state, and we've received the notice to proceed language at both of them. So that's kind of point one and two. The next is that the interconnect and the FSA pieces are executed, and the third at Brazoria is that the CIAC has been funded, and at the Sealy location, substation's already under construction.
So these are, these are significantly progressed projects, and what we've seen is that the view of the batching and the study rollout is largely being informed by project maturity, as well as location. What we've gotten feedback from on the utility of both of those locations, the same utility, is that the location that we selected is at a point in the overall ERCOT transmission system that's going to be the least impacted by this type of reevaluation process. So we feel very, very positively about where these two assets fit within the system and how they're gonna be treated, but until ERCOT comes out with final language, you know, we can't, we can't have 100% visibility into that yet.
Stephen Glagola (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Okay, great. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of John Todaro with Needham & Company. Please go ahead.
John Todaro (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. Two here. I guess we'll start with the one that kind of comes off the ERCOT question. Are there... As you think about just kind of longer-term pipeline, adding more power, are there other power markets that are now starting to look maybe a little bit more attractive relative to Texas? And where could we, could we see that? And then I have a follow-up on the HPC tenant side.
Harry Sudock (Chief Business Officer)
Thanks, John. You know, I think that we have always had a strong heritage of diverse portfolio construction. We see it in the way that we enter into power agreements today. We've got a significant footprint deployed and operating in Georgia. We've got significant presence in Tennessee. Wyoming and Mississippi as well are the smallest two, but they're by no means small. So I think that what we're gonna be able to accomplish is a continued expansion in those markets because of the relationship and community quality that we've engaged in to date. But additionally, I think that, you know, the other side of the question that you're asking is: do large-scale data centers skew towards in front-of-the-meter power or behind-the-meter power? And we're asking these questions internally along both vectors.
So we think that there's a huge amount of opportunity inside of Texas and outside on the in-front-of-the-meter profile. We have a team that's become exceedingly expert in sourcing, negotiating, and closing on that power. And then we're also strongly evaluating the capacity for behind-the-meter power as well, in places where we're either able to get a smaller in-front-of-the-meter load, or there's a particularly rich commodity environment by which we could power behind-the-meter generation, and then the associated data center. So, you know, we're a people-first business, fundamentally, and our power and land teams are prepared to expand the portfolio very, very broadly in a diversified way, but also add that potential for behind-the-meter to the repertoire as well.
John Todaro (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Great. Thanks for that. And then just on the HPC tenant discussion, I guess just trying to gauge kind of how far advanced we are in the positioning. Is it? Are we kind of down to one potential tenant that seems much further along, or is there kind of three that are in final competition stages? Just a little bit more color there.
Harry Sudock (Chief Business Officer)
Ask me a question that I can answer. What I would say, John, to be honest with you, is there are multiple potential offtake tenants for Sandersville to begin with. I would say there is a specific front-runner by an order of magnitude, to the extent that our team is collaborating with their team on the site placement. You may have seen a slide in our deck that had a mock-up of the layout of the data center. So we've advanced it significantly with a particular offtake, but by no means is it committed elsewhere. I mean, the competition for megawatts and land right now is stronger than it was when we announced this strategy to expand into AI. So we're not closing any doors, but I would say there's a clear front-runner there.
John Todaro (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Got it. Sounds good. Thank you, gentlemen.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Brett Knoblauch with Cantor Fitzgerald. Please go ahead.
Gareth Gacetta (Equity Research Analyst)
Hi, guys. This is Gareth on for Brett. I was just hoping you could go into detail on the two new sites in Texas. When are you guys expecting to have power available on those sites, and what do you think the timelines are kind of going forward there?
Harry Sudock (Chief Business Officer)
Yeah, absolutely. So let's tackle the Sealy project first. The land secured is 271 acres. The gross power is 285 megawatts. The first 207 to 209 is coming first half of 2027, and then it's about 40 in 2028 and 40 in 2029. And that's driven by the transmission agreement by which we secure the power. The second project that's in Brazoria County, larger footprint with up to 477 acres at that location. And the way that it's structured is that we've signed for that agreement, but we're not closed yet, and there's some closing conditions associated with it that we expect to wrap up here in Q1.
The timeline for the energization is a function of some of those closing conditions, and so, you know, we don't have the type of line in the sand clarity that we have at Sealy, but I think that Q4 2027, Q1 2028 is a range that is all reasonable, and everybody internally is working to bring that energization date as close to the inside as possible.
Gareth Gacetta (Equity Research Analyst)
Great. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Paul Golding with Macquarie. Please go ahead.
Paul Golding (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Thanks so much for the question, and congrats on all the progress. Gary, you referenced a peer's recent capital raise, and I just wanted to ask, as we think about the liquidity you have, but also you have substantial capacity going forward that you'll hopefully be growing into with leases. Should we take that to be... That comment to be indicative of at all, of how you hope to essentially face a counterparty in terms of counterparty type, you know, face to face with hyperscaler, able to do, you know, high yield raises, where the counterparty credit quality could yield that, I guess? How should we think about how you're selecting your counterparties, given the context, given around capital raising and cost of capital?
Thanks so much.
Gary Vecchiarelli (President and CFO)
Yeah. You bet. Hey, thanks, Paul. I'll tell you that that it's very important to us to have that grade A credit quality tenant, because we think that's the most financiable and the best cost of capital. So that's what we're focused on. In terms of the vehicle, you know, I quote the recent Cipher deal because, you know, the high yield seems to be a playbook that a number of our peers have started to go down that path. We're open to that. We're happy to see that, you know, that the terms are getting better, both with that and the,
...that and the contracts and leases that are backed by that bond. There's some other options as well. Obviously, a little higher cost of capital, but at the end of the day, what's great about this is, and you've heard this word from us for quarters or years now, is optionality, right? We have a lot of options on the table. But I think it's safe to say we're going to follow a playbook right now that's probably proven in the capital markets, and it all starts with a Grade A tenant.
Paul Golding (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Thanks. And then maybe a follow-up. I believe, Matt, you mentioned when speaking about the Sandersville work and the 122 acres with tenant-driven specs in mind, how should we think about what that means for terms? You also noted that the terms in discussion were seemingly more positive across the conversations you're having. Is there any kind of prepayment or deposit discussion involved in the conversations you're having, given that you are proactively using tenant-driven specs to set up the sites for HPC?
Matt Schultz (Chairman and CEO)
Thanks for the question, Paul. It's a little early in the discussions to comment on that directly, but I can tell you that, you know, we're obviously, there are a number of different leases that have been put up. You've seen modified gross, you've seen triple net, you've seen hosted agreements, you've seen miners that have committed to buy the chips themselves. So I can tell you that our focus initially, and I'm not—I don't mean to downplay the quality of any other transaction, but as we look at the financing options, I think it's important to us to have a significantly better deal than I think the market would have otherwise expected.
I think we're interested in putting a deal together directly with a hyperscaler, not necessarily with a neocloud backed by a hyperscaler. And we believe that we'll set the standard for the quality of the agreement and the, I guess, win-win is a term we use in the company a lot. There will certainly be expectations. Our feet will be held to the fire, so to speak, to deliver, but it's not at the risk of an existential threat on a fail to deliver. So, you know, we're negotiating all those terms, and I think what you'll see when we announce the first lease is a basis or a model for what you can expect going forward.
Paul Golding (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Great color. Thanks so much.
Matt Schultz (Chairman and CEO)
Thanks, Paul.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Jim McIlree with Chardan. Please go ahead.
Jim McIlree (Senior Research Analyst)
Thank you. Good evening. At current Bitcoin prices, let's call it $63,000 or so, how much of your miner fleet is economic to operate? Or another way to ask it is, how much of the miner fleet meets the hurdle rate in order to operate?
Matt Schultz (Chairman and CEO)
Great question, Jim. Thank you for that. So our fleet efficiency improved, and then it got a bit worse, and it got worse by design because as mining economics improved, we actually started to scale up some less efficient equipment in our fleet. What I can tell you is that Taylor and his team are constantly running real-time analysis based on utility prices, network difficulty, and the price of Bitcoin. And they brought me in to Gary and myself this morning as we were working on this presentation today. They brought us in a list, and I would say less than 10% of our fleet at the current $30 hash price is not profitable.
So the vast majority of it is, and a small portion that is at or below the break-even threshold are machines that we brought on to take advantage of a $125,000 Bitcoin, 1.5 quarters ago. So it's not punitive to us to unplug those. Having said that, as we unplug those less efficient machines or scale them down or underclock them, it, it increases the overall efficiency of our fleet.
Jim McIlree (Senior Research Analyst)
Got it. That's helpful. Thank you. And can you discuss CapEx plans for this year and next, both from a dollar basis as well as an allocation between Bitcoin and HPC?
Gary Vecchiarelli (President and CFO)
Hey, Jim, it's Gary. I'll tell you that our focus is going to be on deploying capital towards AI. You know, that's in the range of $9 million-$11 million a megawatt, which, as you probably know, is being reported by most of our peers in the space right now, and that's the range that we're seeing. So what is deployed is really going to depend on, that amount is going to depend on the design of build and the customers and when we sign those respective leases. But I'll tell you that the overwhelming percentage, majority percentage of that is going to be related to AIDC.
With respect to Bitcoin mining, I think that the investment, particularly at these levels, doesn't make a whole lot of sense from the sticker prices that we're seeing from the major manufacturers. If you look at our balance sheet, as of 12/31, we had about $130 million of prepaid deposits on Bitcoin mining equipment and miners. And you know, about $112 million of that was through September. So we're still deploying some infrastructure, mainly immersion cooling and miners that will help drive down that efficiency, but we don't plan on spending, you know, a significant portion of our cash.
... on mining unless economics change. We need to keep in mind that we are about two years off to the next halving, and in any cycle, as you get closer to the halving, that ROI window closes rapidly, and right now it doesn't make sense. So we want to be redirecting every dollar possible towards AI CapEx.
Jim McIlree (Senior Research Analyst)
Fantastic. Thank you. Appreciate it.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Matthew Galinko with Maxim Group. Please go ahead.
Speaker 13
Hey, guys. Good evening. Thank you for taking my question. I'm filling in for Matthew Galinko right now. I was just wondering if you guys have any insight or, I guess, predictions on how we should be thinking about network difficulty in response to the current Bitcoin prices.
Matt Schultz (Chairman and CEO)
Yeah, absolutely. So I think that what we've seen over the last two weeks and the difficulty adjustment that's coming on Saturday is important to know, is the largest difficulty adjustment to the downside since the China mining ban in 2020. And that's a combination of two factors. The first is that there have been significant weather events across the entire country during that period of time, where you're seeing either the demand response programs get engaged or you're seeing power prices move past the break-even point of economics. And so that's certainly a contributor to this difficulty adjustment. The second piece is clearly Bitcoin price is off considerably. And so that next coming difficulty adjustment is gonna be a significant one.
And then I think given the price action that we've seen in the latter part of the difficulty adjustment period that we're in the middle of right now, we could see additional downward pressure on difficulty in addition to that. So I think that ultimately, this is the self-healing nature of the proof of work in Bitcoin mining system. And as you see these types of market forces, the network adjusts to be able to create that security model that's supposed to keep producing blocks and processing transactions.
Gary Vecchiarelli (President and CFO)
I just want to add one thing, because if you look at this historically, when Bitcoin runs and hash price gets better, the global hash rate lags, right? You'll have a period of time, usually weeks, maybe a month or whatever, for miners to find a way to get plugged in, because miners just don't sit around waiting for hash price to sit. Typically, they're just not on racks, just waiting for Bitcoin price at a certain price. It's the opposite on the way down because most miners, not all, but most miners know what their break even is, because that's a real punitive cash penalty, because they have to pay their power bills. And so as Bitcoin mining economics go down, what we've seen, at least historically, is that hash rate comes off pretty quickly, pretty close to that.
And that's because miners say, "Well, hey, why am I going to take a loss of X amount of dollars when I could just go buy Bitcoin, and I'd have more Bitcoin than if I actually mined it?" So I think that given that, shrouded in the fact that we have a decreasing fleet with decreasing joules per terahash, meaning our efficiency is going up, and we're more efficient, and we're producing more Bitcoin for every watt that we're putting through these machines, we will be one of the last ones, theoretically, to turn off, and we will mine more Bitcoin in terms of quantity, as that global hash decreases.
Speaker 13
Thank you for that. I guess just a follow-up on the Texas opportunities. Do you guys have a timeline on executing a behind-the-meter opportunity into your portfolio?
Matt Schultz (Chairman and CEO)
Yeah, I appreciate the question. I think it's too early to have a view on the exact timing for that type of opportunity. What I can say is that we're evaluating a number of different behind-the-meter deployment types. Some of those energization schedules are longer, some of them are much faster to market. And so ultimately, those types of decisions will be made in concert with the tenant community, and we're really looking to be able to meet their need and satisfy that compute demand, whether that's through one form of behind-the-meter generation or another.
Speaker 13
Awesome. Thank you for that. Thanks, guys.
Matt Schultz (Chairman and CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
There are no further questions currently. Harry, I turn the call back over to you.
Harry Sudock (Chief Business Officer)
Thank you. Thank you everyone again for joining today's earnings call. We look forward to staying in touch and sharing future results with you in the coming quarters. Stay tuned for more progress and our exciting achievements ahead from us at CleanSpark.
Operator (participant)
This concludes today's conference. You may now disconnect.
