MARA Holdings (MARA) Stock Plunges 5% Following $1.5B Bitcoin Liquidation

Table of Contents Shares of MARA Holdings (MARA) experienced a 5% decline on Tuesday, May 12, dropping to approximately $12.65 after the cryptocurrency mining company disclosed substantial first-quarter losses alongside news of significant Bitcoin asset liquidation. Marathon Digital Holdings, Inc., MARA The equity reached an intraday bottom of $11.74 immediately after the earnings announcement before staging a modest rebound. Extended trading saw an additional 1.86% decline. First-quarter revenue totaled $174.6 million, representing an 18% year-over-year decrease. The net deficit of $1.26 billion more than doubled the $533 million shortfall recorded during the equivalent period last year. Bitcoin’s valuation declined approximately 22% throughout the quarter, significantly impacting financial performance. Despite Tuesday’s setback, MARA shares have appreciated roughly 32% over the trailing 30-day period. MARA divested 20,880 BTC at a mean price of $70,137 per token during Q1, realizing approximately $1.5 billion in total proceeds. The majority of these transactions—15,133 BTC generating about $1.1 billion—occurred between March 4 and March 25. These funds were strategically allocated to repurchase the company’s convertible notes, reducing convertible obligations from approximately $3.3 billion to $2.3 billion, representing a 30% contraction. This debt restructuring produced a $71 million accounting gain. Following these dispositions, MARA fell from second to fourth position among publicly listed Bitcoin holders. The company maintains 35,303 BTC in treasury, currently valued at approximately $2.84 billion. MARA is executing a fundamental business model transformation, rebranding itself as “a digital infrastructure company built to convert energy into high-value compute workloads.” Executive leadership indicated that as much as 90% of the firm’s non-hosted mining infrastructure could be reallocated toward AI and high-performance computing applications. The company has explicitly stated it will not pursue additional large-scale Bitcoin mining hardware acquisitions. CEO Fred Thiel articulated the strategy clearly: “Bitcoin mining is not a legacy business we are moving away from. It is the operational foundation on which we are building.” To support this AI-focused expansion, MARA entered into an agreement to acquire Long Ridge Energy and Power—a 505-megawatt combined-cycle natural gas generation facility in Ohio spanning over 1,600 acres—for approximately $1.5 billion, which includes roughly $785 million in assumed liabilities. This represents the company’s largest acquisition in its history. Management forecasts the asset will generate $144 million in annual EBITDA. Throughout the first quarter, MARA also secured a majority stake in Exaion, a French AI and HPC data center operator, for $174.5 million. A collaborative arrangement with Starwood Capital, unveiled in Q4 2025, continues to advance. Starwood is managing design, tenant acquisition, and construction activities while MARA provides energy-rich locations. MARA is simultaneously reducing headcount by 15%, an initiative anticipated to yield $12 million in annual cost savings, and has terminated aggressive mining hardware procurement programs as part of its broader restructuring effort.