Bitfarms, now operating as Keel Infrastructure, posted a $145 million net loss for the first quarter of 2026 as the former Bitcoin miner accelerated its pivot toward high-performance computing and artificial intelligence infrastructure across North America.
The company reported $36.99 million in Q1 revenue and a loss from continuing operations of $127.6 million. A $21.6 million loss on extinguishment of long-term debt contributed to the wider quarterly shortfall, a detail largely absent from competing coverage of the earnings release.
Bitfarms Q1 Loss Puts Financial Performance Under the Spotlight
The $145 million net loss represents a steep cost for a company in the middle of a strategic overhaul. Revenue of $37 million came entirely from legacy mining operations that Keel is now winding down.
Between January 1 and May 8, 2026, the company sold 269 Bitcoin for $20 million in proceeds as part of that wind-down. Keel still held approximately $197 million in unencumbered Bitcoin as of May 8, alongside roughly $336 million in unrestricted cash, bringing total liquidity to approximately $533 million.
That liquidity cushion is central to the company’s argument that it can absorb near-term losses while building out its new business. CFO Jonathan Mir said Keel’s cash position should fund the Panther Creek, Sharon and Moses Lake projects through lease execution, cover the start of Moses Lake construction and support general and administrative expenses through 2028.
The quarterly loss comes at a time when other crypto-adjacent companies are also navigating difficult earnings cycles. Exodus recently reported a wider Q1 loss as its own revenue declined sharply, underscoring how challenging the current environment has been for companies straddling traditional finance and digital assets.
Keel Rebrand and AI Transition Signal a Strategic Reset
Bitfarms officially rebranded as Keel Infrastructure on April 1, 2026, completing a U.S. redomiciliation from Canada. Shareholders approved the statutory plan of arrangement on March 20, the Ontario Superior Court issued a final approval order on March 24, and Keel common stock began trading under the KEEL ticker on Nasdaq and TSX on April 6.
CEO Ben Gagnon said the rebrand completed a nearly two-year transformation and refocused the company on constrained North American HPC and AI markets. Keel now claims a 2.2-gigawatt development pipeline for high-performance computing workloads across Pennsylvania, Washington and Quebec.
The pivot from Bitcoin mining to AI infrastructure mirrors a broader trend among energy-intensive crypto companies seeking higher-margin revenue streams. As regulatory frameworks for crypto continue to evolve in Washington, companies like Keel are positioning themselves at the intersection of digital assets and emerging compute demand.
What the Numbers Mean for Keel’s Next Phase
The scale of the Q1 loss raises execution questions. A $145 million quarterly loss is sustainable only if the $533 million liquidity runway holds and HPC revenue materializes on schedule. Mir’s projection that current funds cover operations through 2028 implies roughly two years of runway at current burn rates.
Keel identified evolving regulation around HPC, AI, energy and bitcoin mining as a material operating risk in the Q1 filing. That disclosure signals awareness that the regulatory environment for both its legacy and new business lines remains uncertain, a concern shared across the broader crypto industry.
Bitcoin traded near $80,802 at press time, with market sentiment sitting at neutral on the Fear and Greed Index. For Keel, the price of Bitcoin now matters less as a revenue driver and more as a balance sheet variable, given the $197 million in unencumbered BTC still on its books.
The company’s next milestones will be lease execution at its three flagship HPC sites and the start of Moses Lake construction. Whether Keel can convert a 2.2-gigawatt pipeline into contracted revenue before its cash cushion erodes will determine if the rebrand was a strategic reset or an expensive detour.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
