Keel Shares Jump As $145M Q1 Loss Tests Former Bitfarms AI Pivot
Keel Infrastructure, formerly known as Bitfarms, reported a net loss of $145.4 million for the first quarter of 2026.
Summary
- Keel’s Q1 revenue fell 23% to $37 million as losses widened after its rebrand shift.
- The company said $533 million in liquidity can fund priority sites through lease execution plans.
- Shares closed higher as investors weighed AI infrastructure demand against weak Bitcoin mining results.
Revenue fell to $37 million, down 23% from $47.7 million a year earlier. The company also posted a $98.4 million operating loss, compared with $34.8 million in Q1 2025.
The result included a $41.4 million loss from changes in the fair value of digital assets and a $21.6 million loss tied to the extinguishment of long-term debt.
Meanwhile, KEEL shares closed at $4.30 on May 11, up 8.31% for the session. The stock later traded at $4.27 after hours, down 0.70%, according to Google Finance data.
The stock reaction showed that investors focused on the company’s AI infrastructure plan, not only the weaker quarterly numbers. Google Finance listed KEEL’s intraday high at $4.50 and its low at $3.56.
AI infrastructure becomes the main plan
Keel said it completed its redomiciliation to the United States and rebranded as part of a shift away from Bitcoin mining. The company now presents itself as a North American data center and energy infrastructure developer for AI and high-performance computing.
“Our rebranding to Keel Infrastructure marks the completion of a nearly two-year strategic transformation,” said chief executive Ben Gagnon.
He said the company had exited Latin American megawatts and focused its pipeline on North American AI markets.
Liquidity supports site development
Keel reported about $533 million in liquidity as of May 8. That total included $336 million in unrestricted cash and $197 million in unencumbered Bitcoin.
Chief financial officer Jonathan Mir said, “Our liquidity stands at approximately $533 million.” He said the funds can support Panther Creek, Sharon, and Moses Lake through lease execution and cover general expenses through 2028.
The company said it secured zoning approvals and advanced land and environmental work at the three priority sites. Keel also sold 269 Bitcoin for $20 million between Jan. 1 and May 8 as part of its planned wind down of its Bitcoin position.
Miners keep moving toward AI
Keel’s pivot fits a wider shift among public Bitcoin miners. Recent market updates showed Core Scientific is converting its Pecos, Texas, mining site into a 1.5-gigawatt AI data center campus, with 300 megawatts moving away from mining use.
Separate coverage also showed Core Scientific’s self-mining revenue fell as its AI colocation business grew. MARA has taken a similar route through its Starwood partnership, which targets AI-focused data centers across power-rich mining sites.
Crypto Treasuries Chase A New Kind Of Capital
There is a peculiar irony at the heart of the crypto treasury movement. Companies that staked their futures on digital a... Read more
What Strategy's Bitcoin Sale Really Tells Us
There is a moment in every bull run when the narrative starts to fray. Not with a crash, not with a scandal, but with so... Read more
The Clock Is Ticking On UK Stablecoins
The world is not waiting for Britain to make up its mind. While the United States and the European Union have spent the ... Read more
From Cypherpunk To Citadel
How Crypto Moved from the Wild West to the Mainstream Financial SystemA long-form analysis of Bitcoin's journey from fri... Read more
Tether Plots Global Expansion
Stablecoin leader seeks to transform itself from crypto plumbing provider into a broad “freedom tech” conglomerateTe... Read more
World Liberty Seeks Federal Trust Charter
World Liberty Financial, the crypto venture backed by the Trump family, has applied for a US national bank trust charter... Read more