CleanSpark increased its Bitcoin holdings despite selling most of February’s mined coins.
- CleanSpark mined 568 $BTC in February, bringing its year-to-date total to 1,141 $BTC.
- The miner sold 553.02 $BTC at an average price of $66,279, booking cash while retaining some production.
- Total treasury holdings rose to 13,363 $BTC, signaling a balance between monetization and long-term accumulation.
Bitcoin ($BTC) miner CleanSpark reported a solid production update for February, underscoring how listed miners are navigating a higher price environment by both monetizing output and building balance-sheet exposure.
The company mined 568 $BTC during the month, lifting its year-to-date tally to 1,141 $BTC, according to figures highlighted by ChainCatcher. At the same time, CleanSpark sold 553.02 $BTC at an average price of $66,279, using the rally to raise cash while still modestly increasing net holdings. By month-end, the firm’s treasury had grown to 13,363 $BTC, reflecting a strategy that combines operational funding needs with a long-term bullish stance on the asset.
The approach illustrates how miners are adjusting after previous cycles where many either dumped most production to cover costs or, conversely, hoarded coins through deep drawdowns. With $BTC trading near cycle highs and hash rate competition intense, CleanSpark’s blend of opportunistic selling and ongoing accumulation aims to keep leverage and dilution in check while preserving upside participation. Investors closely watch such treasury decisions, as they can influence both balance-sheet resilience and sensitivity to future price swings. Miners that sell too aggressively may underperform in bull phases, while those that over-accumulate risk liquidity stress if conditions deteriorate.
Miner treasuries and market signaling
CleanSpark’s latest update feeds into the broader discussion about how miner balance sheets impact market structure and supply dynamics. When miners sell into strength but maintain or increase core holdings, they effectively drip-feed liquidity to the market without completely removing their potential to become forced sellers during downturns. In aggregate, miner flows can influence short-term supply-demand imbalances, particularly around key events such as halvings, regulatory shifts or large ETF-driven inflows. Watching how firms manage inventories offers clues about industry confidence in current prices and future trajectories.
For institutional investors and analysts, miner treasury strategies are increasingly assessed alongside metrics like production cost per coin, energy contracts, and diversification into adjacent businesses such as high-performance computing or AI infrastructure. Some miners have partnered with platforms like Coinbase for custody or financing solutions, while others look to strike structured deals with energy providers and financial institutions akin to Visa’s partnerships in the payments world. As regulatory clarity, including regimes like MiCA, expands, miners that can demonstrate disciplined capital allocation and robust governance around their $BTC holdings may enjoy better access to traditional financing and a valuation premium over less transparent peers.