Nvidia looks to tap at least $20 billion in bonds as AI boom reshapes Bitcoin mining Nvidia is preparing a massive debt sale — a multi-part bond offering of at least $20 billion — to bankroll AI expansion and refinance existing obligations, Bloomberg reports. The chip giant plans to issue notes across seven maturities from two to 30 years, with the longest-dated paper expected to price roughly 0.9 percentage points above comparable U.S. Treasuries. The move highlights how the surging demand for AI infrastructure is drawing enormous pools of capital and reshaping adjacent industries, including Bitcoin mining. Why it matters for crypto As the premier supplier of GPUs that power large language models and other AI workloads, Nvidia sits at the center of the AI boom. Its spending plans are closely watched by investors and tech firms alike, and the company has pushed global partnerships — including deals announced in South Korea with SK Hynix, Naver, SK Telecom, Doosan Group, LG Group, and Hyundai Motor Group — that cover memory chips, AI data centers, robotics, mobility and industrial AI systems. That same AI demand is opening a new playbook for Bitcoin miners. Firms that already control substantial power capacity and data-center infrastructure are increasingly marketing AI and high-performance computing (HPC) services in addition to traditional hash-rate operations. Public miners such as HIVE Digital, TeraWulf, Hut 8 and CleanSpark have all leaned into AI/HPC offerings, repurposing facilities and monetizing power contracts originally struck for mining. Market reaction and scale of the pivot Investors have rewarded the pivot: even as Bitcoin fell roughly 17% in the opening months of 2026, a basket of publicly traded mining stocks rose more than 50%, with the top performers up over 70%, crypto.news reports. Public miners have announced more than $70 billion in cumulative AI and HPC contracts, and industry projections suggest listed miners could earn as much as 70% of revenue from AI activities by the end of 2026 — up from roughly 30% today. Challenges remain for miners The AI opportunity comes as miners still grapple with a tougher mining business. Since Bitcoin’s April 2024 halving, rising difficulty and operating costs have squeezed margins, prompting companies to reduce leverage, sell portions of their BTC reserves and diversify revenue streams. Data from TheEnergyMag shows miners sold more than 15,000 BTC between October and March as they adjusted to harder conditions. Canaan’s recent results illustrate the pressure. In its June operational update the Nasdaq-listed miner reported producing 90 BTC and receiving another 24 BTC from customers. But Canaan’s Q1 filings projected Q2 revenue of $35–45 million, well below analysts’ estimate of about $96 million. The company also received a second Nasdaq non-compliance notice in January after its share price fell under the exchange’s $1 minimum bid rule; it has until July 13, 2026 to regain compliance. Bottom line Nvidia’s planned $20 billion bond offering underscores how the AI infrastructure buildout is accelerating and redirecting capital flows across technology markets. For Bitcoin miners, the AI wave offers a lifeline and a path to more stable, non-crypto revenue — but the transition is unfolding amid one of the most challenging operating environments the mining sector has faced. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news