CleanSpark closed fiscal 2025 with $766.3 million in revenue, marking a 102% year-over-year increase. The company posted a net income of $364.5 million after a $145.8 million loss in fiscal 2024.
CleanSpark reported an adjusted EBITDA of $823.4 million, up from $245.8 million last year. Executives credited the improvement to operational growth and strategic use of financial tools. CEO Matt Schultz said the firm “achieved operating leverage” during a transformative year.
CleanSpark ended the fiscal year with $3.2 billion in total assets and $2.2 billion in stockholders’ equity. The company held $1.2 billion in Bitcoin and $43 million in cash as of September 30. Its long-term debt stood at $644.6 million, while working capital reached $1 billion.
The company expanded its bitcoin treasury throughout the year and exceeded 13,000 BTC by the end of September. This placed CleanSpark among the largest public bitcoin holders globally. The firm also maintained $950.1 million in mining assets.
CleanSpark completed a $1.15 billion zero-coupon convertible notes offering, raising $1.13 billion in net proceeds. The company used $460 million of the funds to repurchase 30.6 million shares. Schultz referred to the financing as a “defining moment” for its compute platform strategy.
CleanSpark plans to use the remaining funds for new data centers, power and land acquisition, and debt repayment. The company repaid bitcoin-backed credit lines with part of the proceeds. It emphasized that financing was conducted using convertible debt and revolvers rather than an ATM program.
President and CFO Gary Vecchiarelli said CleanSpark is “financially positioned to rapidly become a leading AI infrastructure provider.” He pointed to the capital stack and treasury operations as strengths. The firm has mapped a strategy focused on energy and compute infrastructure.
In October, CleanSpark hired Jeffrey Thomas, a former Humain executive, to lead its AI data-center unit. Schultz said the appointment places CleanSpark “at the center of the AI and intelligent-computing revolution.” The company is evaluating its Georgia facilities for AI infrastructure conversion.
CleanSpark is also assessing “giga-campus” locations across its network to meet AI-related demand. The company aims to scale its compute infrastructure alongside its core bitcoin operations.
Executives said CleanSpark is evolving into a “comprehensive compute platform.”
Shares rose 3% Tuesday before results were released, then fell 2% in pre-market trading Wednesday. Executives cited new milestones, including crossing 50 EH/s of hashrate and record revenue levels. CleanSpark enters fiscal 2026 with momentum across bitcoin mining and emerging compute workloads.
The post Behind CleanSpark’s $766M Surge: A Silent Shift in Strategy Unfolds appeared first on CoinCentral.


