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BitRiver’s Bankruptcy will Impact Bitcoin’s Global Hashrates 

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BitRiver, Russia’s largest Bitcoin mining company, is currently facing a serious bankruptcy crisis.

A Russian arbitration court specifically in the Sverdlovsk Region has initiated bankruptcy observation/monitoring proceedings (the initial stage of insolvency) against Fox Group of Companies LLC, the parent entity that owns 98% of BitRiver’s management company.

This was triggered by a creditor claim from “Siberian Infrastructure”, a subsidiary of the En+ Group associated with energy oligarch Oleg Deripaska, seeking repayment of over $9.2 million approximately 700 million rubles.

The debt stems from unpaid advances and penalties related to undelivered equipment under contracts from 2023-2024, amid prior court orders that BitRiver failed to satisfy due to lack of assets. Founder and CEO Igor Runets has been placed under house arrest on charges of tax evasion (multiple counts, allegedly involving concealment of assets worth significant sums).

This detention occurred recently reported over the weekend leading into today. The company has faced ongoing challenges since U.S. sanctions in 2022 following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, including withdrawal of investments, unpaid wages in 2024, equipment-related disputes, regional mining restrictions, power debts, and shutdowns of several data centers.

BitRiver, founded in 2017, grew to operate around 15 data centers in Siberia with 533 MW capacity and over 175,000 servers, leveraging cheap hydroelectric power and cold climate for efficient mining. It provided hosting services but has been hit hard by geopolitical and financial pressures.

This places significant uncertainty on clients/partners using its infrastructure, though the direct impact on global Bitcoin hashrate remains unclear at this stage. Reports describe it as a potential “collapse” or major shakeup in the sector.

The impact of BitRiver’s bankruptcy crisis on the global Bitcoin hashrate is likely limited and temporary, representing only a small fraction (around 1-2%) of the network’s total computing power as of February 2026.

BitRiver operates approximately 533 MW of capacity across its 15 data centers in Siberia, hosting over 175,000 mining rigs primarily for third-party clients via hosting services, though it also runs some proprietary operations.

This makes it Russia’s largest single operator and historically one of the biggest in the country. Russia as a whole holds a substantial share of global hashrate—estimated at 16.4% roughly 175 EH/s as of early 2026, according to Hashrate Index data from late 2025/early 2026.

The global Bitcoin network hashrate currently fluctuates around 835-960 EH/s with recent 7-day averages in the 850-900 EH/s range, per sources CoinWarz, Minerstat, and Hashrate Index. To estimate BitRiver’s contribution: Modern efficient miners achieve roughly 20-30 J/TH efficiency, but averages across fleets are often higher.

At 533 MW, assuming an average efficiency of ~25-30 J/TH, conservative for a mix of hardware, this equates to roughly 18-21 EH/s of hashrate potential if fully utilized. However, not all capacity is always at 100% utilization due to power constraints, maintenance, or client variations.

Real-world contributions are likely lower, and BitRiver’s sanctioned status since 2022 has already reduced its peak influence e.g., major client losses like SBI in 2023 led to earlier hashrate drops. Thus, even in a worst-case full offline scenario, BitRiver’s shutdown would remove ~1-2.5% of global hashrate (most estimates lean toward the lower end given partial operations and Russia’s broader ecosystem).

Russia’s mining sector remains robust and growing — Overall connected mining/data center capacity reached ~4 GW in 2025 up 33% YoY, driven by cheap hydropower/gas and domestic expansion. Other operators like Intelion, BitCluster, or newer projects can absorb displaced rigs/clients.

Hashrate is highly mobile — Miners frequently relocate hardware to cheaper/available power sources. Any BitRiver-hosted rigs could migrate elsewhere in Russia or abroad if bankruptcy leads to asset sales/liquidation.

Bitcoin hashrate has seen larger drops before e.g., 12%+ drawdowns in late 2025/early 2026 due to weather/other factors without major disruption. Difficulty adjusts downward automatically, next expected ~February 7-8, 2026, potentially -3% or more recently, restoring block times and miner profitability for survivors.

No immediate mass offline reported — Proceedings are in the observation/monitoring stage not full liquidation, and some operations may continue under administration. CEO Igor Runets’ house arrest adds uncertainty, but no widespread shutdowns are confirmed yet.

While BitRiver’s troubles highlight ongoing geopolitical/financial pressures on Russian mining, the global Bitcoin network’s hashrate should experience only a minor, short-lived dip—if any measurable effect at all—given the sector’s scale and adaptability. The situation remains fluid; monitor for updates on asset transfers or client migrations.

Global Unwind of Precious Metals Extends to Crypto Market 

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While there is notable selling pressure and volatility across global markets—driven by a dramatic unwind in precious metals, crypto weakness, AI-related doubts, and policy uncertainties—it’s far from a full-blown crash or total meltdown.

U.S. indices closed lower on Friday (January 30/31) and futures point to continued declines at the open today: Dow Jones Industrial Average: Around 48,892 down ~0.36% recently.S&P 500: Around 6,939 down ~0.43%. Nasdaq Composite: Around 23,462 down ~0.94%, hit harder due to tech exposure.

Futures this morning showed S&P 500 down ~0.3–0.7%, Nasdaq-100 down ~0.6–1%, and Dow relatively flat to mildly lower—indicating a rough but not catastrophic start. Asia saw sharper moves: South Korea’s Kospi plunged ~5.3% triggering trading halts, reflecting heavy AI/chip sector exposure.

Europe is sliding in sympathy, with broad risk-off sentiment. Commodities are the epicenter of the chaos: Gold and silver experienced historic plunges; silver’s worst single-day drop since 1980, wiping out massive 2026 gains; gold down sharply from peaks near $5,500+.

This has spilled over, forcing liquidations and margin calls. Bitcoin dipped below $80,000 trading near $77,700–$79,000 after weekend losses. Uncertainty around Trump’s Fed chair pick like Kevin Warsh nomination, AI hype cooling, potential margin calls from leveraged commodity positions, and broader risk aversion.

This looks like a sharp correction / risk-off rotation rather than “widespread panic” nuking everything indiscriminately. Analysts describe it as an unwind of overextended positions especially in metals after their parabolic run, not a systemic crisis. Some call it a “healthy correction” or forced selling from leverage, with no clear evidence of broad economic collapse.

Markets are volatile right now—precious metals are whipsawing, tech is under pressure, and sentiment is nervous ahead of big events like earnings, jobs data, and policy clarity. But “every market nuking” overstates it; safe-haven elements like parts of the dollar are holding firmer, and not all sectors are in freefall.

The impact on AI stocks amid the current market volatility has been notably negative, with the sector facing outsized pressure compared to the broader market. This stems from a combination of risk-off sentiment, doubts about AI hype vs. fundamentals, heavy selling in related areas like crypto and commodities spilling over, and specific company-level concerns.

The sharp unwind in precious metals (gold/silver’s brutal drops), Bitcoin dipping below $80K with ongoing crypto weakness, and margin call fears have triggered forced selling across risk assets. AI/tech names, often seen as high-beta and growth-oriented, are getting hit harder in this environment.

Questions are mounting about whether AI excitement has outpaced real returns on investment. Recent reports highlight: Stalled or disappointing aspects of major AI deals e.g., Nvidia pausing/clarifying its reported $100B OpenAI investment due to profitability concerns.

Rising capex scrutiny—Microsoft’s massive AI infrastructure spending like the $37.5B+ quarterly mentions in recent context amid slower Azure growth and OpenAI losses has fueled fears of unsustainable circular financing. Broader surveys from late 2025 showing ~50-74% of economists/investors expecting AI stock declines in 2026, with potential global spillover.

Tech-Heavy Index Weakness

Nasdaq futures and the index itself are leading declines (Nasdaq-100 futures down ~0.7-1.1% premarket/early trading), driven by AI exposure. Asia’s tech/chip stocks like South Korea’s Kospi -5%+ on Samsung/SK Hynix amplified the global contagion.

The “Magnificent 7” (heavily AI-tied) are mixed to lower YTD and in the recent selloff, underperforming the broader S&P in spots despite strong 2025 runs for some. Nvidia (NVDA): Closed recently around $191 down ~0.7% on the day, with premarket dips to ~$187-188 (-1-2%). Sentiment soured further on OpenAI deal doubts, though longer-term AI chip demand remains a bright spot.

Microsoft (MSFT): Hit hard recently (worst weekly drop since 2020 in some reports), with AI capex and cloud revenue concerns dragging it down significantly. Others in Mag 7: Alphabet (GOOGL) holding firmer (up modestly YTD in some views), Amazon/Meta/Tesla/Apple more mixed to negative. Overall group flat to down in early 2026 trading.

Oracle down ~3% premarket on $50B AI funding plans; software/SaaS names crushed on guidance fears amid agentic AI disruption risks. This isn’t a full “AI bubble pop” yet—many view it as a healthy correction or rotation out of overextended positions after parabolic 2023-2025 gains.

AI infrastructure (chips, data centers, power) is seen as more durable than application-layer software, with capital rotating there rather than exiting tech entirely. ISM Manufacturing data, Big Tech earnings e.g., Alphabet/Amazon early Feb, Nvidia later, Fed policy clarity under the new chair nominee, and any macro stabilization.

If AI-related earnings show meaningful ROI progress, it could stem the bleeding; otherwise, further downside risk exists, especially if risk aversion persists. Markets are headline-driven right now—watch for rebounds if data/support levels hold, but caution prevails.

The Physics of Pricing by Ndubuisi Ekekwe

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In pricing, many people obsess over the number. They debate whether the product should be N9,999 or N10,499, $99 or $109. That debate is often misplaced. The number itself is largely inconsequential. What truly matters is how the customer perceives that number. This is where pricing stops being an social science and enters into the domain of natural philosophy.

Two salespeople can present the same product, at the same price, to the same customer, and produce two very different outcomes. One walks away with a sale; the other walks away with objections. The price did not change. What changed was perception.

This is the essence of pricing power: not the ability to raise or lower prices, but the ability to shape perception such that customers move, without touching the price. The goal is not merely to make a product appear “cheap.” Cheap is easy. Affordable is harder. Something can be cheap and still feel unaffordable if perception has not been properly engineered.

At Tekedia Institute, I often explain pricing through the lens of inertia. In physics, inertia is the tendency of matter to remain in its current state unless acted upon by an external force. Customers behave the same way. Left alone, they remain in the state of not buying. “Not sure” is their natural equilibrium. To move them from “Not Sure” to “Paid,” you must apply energy.

That energy is not discounts. It is communication, at a higher level. It is framing value, reducing cognitive friction, and helping customers mentally justify the purchase. In a Harvard Business Review article (read at Harvard here  ), I used the iPhone as a case study. Apple rarely competes on price. Instead, it competes on perception, applying just enough energy to overcome spending inertia. Once inertia is broken, the wallet opens.

You learned Newton’s laws in junior secondary school: an object at rest remains at rest unless acted upon by a force. Markets obey the same laws. Sales happen when sufficient energy is applied to overcome inertia. Premium market share is won not just by changing prices, but by mastering the physics of perception.

Simply put, pricing is not about numbers; it is about motion. The firm that understands how to move customers, without moving the price, has discovered real pricing power.

At Tekedia Institute, over the years, I have taught thousands of co-learners on how to deploy that pricing power. Join us as we begin the next edition of Tekedia Mini-MBA on Feb 9 here.

 

U.S. Rare Earth Stocks Rally as Trump Advances ‘Project Vault’ to Counter China’s Grip on Critical Minerals

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Shares of U.S.-listed rare earth mining companies surged on Monday after reports that President Donald Trump is preparing a sweeping initiative to establish a strategic stockpile of critical minerals, a move that would deepen Washington’s involvement in a sector long dominated by China and central to the global energy transition, defense manufacturing, and advanced technologies.

The proposal, known as Project Vault, would create a first-of-its-kind strategic critical-minerals stockpile tailored to support the U.S. private sector, according to Bloomberg News, which cited senior administration officials familiar with the plan. The initiative is designed to sharply reduce America’s reliance on China for rare earth elements and related materials used in electric vehicles, military systems, semiconductors, and other high-value technologies.

Under the plan, Project Vault would combine $1.67 billion in private capital with a $10 billion loan facility from the U.S. Export-Import Bank, creating a large pool of financing to support domestic mining, processing, and magnet manufacturing. The structure signals an aggressive effort by the Trump administration to mobilize both public and private capital to rebuild supply chains that have eroded over the course of decades.

Investors responded quickly. MP Materials, the operator of the Mountain Pass mine in California and currently the only major U.S. producer of rare earths, rose about 4% in early trading. USA Rare Earth climbed roughly 7%, while Critical Metals Corp jumped around 8%, reflecting expectations that Project Vault could translate into guaranteed demand, government-backed financing, and improved pricing visibility for domestic producers.

The rally underscores how sensitive the sector is to policy signals. Rare earth mining and processing are capital-intensive, environmentally complex, and historically vulnerable to price swings driven by Chinese supply decisions. Any indication of long-term government support can significantly alter the investment case.

A White House spokesperson was not immediately available to comment, but administration officials have increasingly framed critical minerals as a national security priority rather than a purely commercial concern.

Reducing Dependence on China

China currently dominates the global rare earth ecosystem, accounting for the vast majority of processing capacity and magnet production, even when raw materials are mined elsewhere. This concentration has alarmed U.S. policymakers across multiple administrations, particularly as Beijing has shown a willingness to use export controls as a geopolitical tool.

Trump’s Project Vault fits into a broader strategy to reshore or “friend-shore” supply chains tied to strategic industries. By creating a stockpile explicitly designed to support private-sector use, the plan goes beyond traditional government reserves, such as the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, and instead aims to stabilize supply for manufacturers of EVs, weapons systems, and advanced electronics.

Some companies are already positioning themselves to benefit. USA Rare Earth has held discussions with Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, pitching its domestic mining and magnet manufacturing assets as part of the administration’s strategy. Those talks have reportedly led to a proposed deal that could provide the company with around $1.6 billion in funding, subject to conditions, and could include a U.S. government equity stake.

Such an arrangement would mark another step in Washington’s evolving approach, where the federal government is no longer just a regulator or buyer, but a direct investor in strategically sensitive industries.

Project Vault also builds on actions already taken by the Department of Defense. Last summer, the Pentagon struck a landmark agreement with MP Materials that included a government equity stake, a price floor to protect the company from market volatility, and a long-term commitment to purchase specified quantities of rare earth materials and magnets.

That deal was widely seen as a turning point, signaling that the U.S. government is willing to use balance-sheet support and long-term offtake agreements to ensure domestic capacity survives against cheaper Chinese competition.

If implemented, Project Vault could reshape the U.S. rare earth industry by lowering financing costs, reducing market risk, and accelerating investment in downstream processing and magnet production, areas where the U.S. is particularly weak. Analysts say the initiative also reflects a recognition that market forces alone may not be sufficient to rebuild supply chains that China spent decades consolidating with state backing.

More broadly, the plan highlights how industrial policy has become central to U.S. economic strategy under Trump, especially in sectors tied to national security and technological leadership. This indicates for investors that rare earths are no longer a niche commodities play, but a policy-driven strategic asset class.

Nvidia Shares Dip as OpenAI Mega-Investment Faces Scrutiny

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Nvidia shares slipped in premarket trading on Monday after fresh reports cast doubt on the size and certainty of the chipmaker’s much-publicized plan to invest up to $100 billion in OpenAI.

The semiconductor giant’s stock was down about 1.5% as of 8:47 a.m. ET, following a Wall Street Journal report late Friday that said Nvidia’s plans to make the enormous investment had effectively stalled amid internal uncertainty. The report cited people familiar with the discussions.

The dip underscores growing investor sensitivity to how far — and how fast — spending in the artificial intelligence sector can realistically go.

Nvidia and OpenAI announced in September a sweeping strategic agreement under which Nvidia would help build at least 10 gigawatts of computing infrastructure for OpenAI, an unprecedented scale of AI capacity, alongside a potential equity investment of up to $100 billion. The announcement was widely interpreted as a bold signal of Nvidia’s confidence in OpenAI and of the seemingly limitless appetite for computing power to train and run advanced AI models.

However, according to the Wall Street Journal, Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang has since sought to reframe expectations. The report said Huang told industry associates late last year that the $100 billion figure was non-binding and not finalized, while privately voicing concerns about OpenAI’s business discipline and the intensifying competitive landscape, particularly from Alphabet’s Google and fast-rising rival Anthropic.

Those details unsettled investors, not because Nvidia appears to be pulling back from artificial intelligence, but because they introduced uncertainty around what had been treated as a near-guaranteed, headline-grabbing commitment. Markets have increasingly rewarded clarity and penalized ambiguity as AI investments balloon into tens of billions of dollars.

Over the weekend, Huang publicly rejected the suggestion that relations between Nvidia and OpenAI had soured. Speaking during a visit to Taipei, he dismissed reports of friction as “nonsense” and reaffirmed Nvidia’s intention to invest heavily in the AI company, while stopping short of endorsing the original $100 billion figure.

“We are going to make a huge investment in OpenAI,” Huang said in comments reported by Bloomberg. “I believe in OpenAI. The work that they do is incredible. They are one of the most consequential companies of our time, and I really love working with Sam.”

Referring to OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman, Huang added, “Sam is closing the round, and we will absolutely be involved. We will invest a great deal of money, probably the largest investment we’ve ever made.”

Crucially, Huang declined to specify an amount, saying it was up to Altman to announce the size of the funding round. He also reiterated that Nvidia’s investment would not exceed $100 billion, effectively reframing the figure as a ceiling rather than a commitment.

That nuance appears to be at the heart of Monday’s market reaction. Sarah Kunst, managing director at Cleo Capital, said on CNBC’s “Worldwide Exchange” that investors were reacting to the uncertainty rather than to the idea of Nvidia investing in OpenAI.

“One of the things I did notice about Jensen Huang is that there wasn’t a strong, ‘It will be $100 billion,’” Kunst said. “It was, ‘It will be big. It will be our biggest investment ever.’ And so I do think there are some question marks there.”

She added that the public nature of the back-and-forth was unusual. “That kind of back and forth isn’t normal between an investor and a startup to play out in the media,” she said, noting that it may have amplified market unease.

The episode highlights a broader shift in how investors are viewing the AI boom. After a year of soaring valuations driven by expectations of explosive, near-unlimited spending on AI infrastructure, markets are beginning to scrutinize the sustainability, governance, and returns of those investments more closely.

Nvidia sits at the center of that debate. Its chips underpin much of the generative AI revolution, and OpenAI remains one of its most important customers. Any suggestion that Nvidia is applying greater caution to its largest prospective deal inevitably raises questions about whether AI spending is entering a more measured phase.

At the same time, even a significantly smaller investment would still rank among the largest technology funding rounds in history. The Wall Street Journal reported in December that OpenAI is seeking to raise as much as $100 billion, while The New York Times said this week that Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon, and SoftBank are all in discussions about potential participation.

Thus, Nvidia’s strategic logic of deepening ties with OpenAI remains intact: securing long-term demand for its chips, reinforcing its dominance in AI infrastructure, and maintaining close alignment with one of the most influential AI developers in the world. But Monday’s stock move suggests investors are increasingly focused on the fine print — weighing whether today’s ambitious projections will translate into durable and disciplined growth.