RIOT's data center pivot and why it changes the valuation story
Riot Platforms reported Q1 2026 revenue of $167.2 million, including $33.2 million from its data center segment — a business that hosts high-performance computing infrastructure for third-party customers and is entirely independent of Bitcoin price. That data center revenue represents roughly 20% of total quarterly revenue, and unlike mining revenue, it does not swing with cryptocurrency markets. For traders comparing RIOT versus MARA, this distinction is meaningful: RIOT deserves a modestly higher valuation multiple than a pure-play miner because part of its business resembles a data center operator rather than a speculative crypto company.
The pivot also matters for cost structure. RIOT's mining operations in Texas have access to curtailment credits — when electricity demand peaks, RIOT sells its unused power back to the grid rather than mining, generating revenue from energy trading. In 2025, curtailment and power credits provided substantial income that did not require any Bitcoin to be mined. That dynamic means RIOT's reported mining revenue can be higher or lower than the simple hash-rate-times-BTC-price calculation suggests, depending on grid energy demand.
- Data center revenue (~20% of total) is not correlated with Bitcoin — RIOT's valuation multiple deserves a modest premium over pure-play miners.
- Power curtailment credits let RIOT earn revenue by selling electricity back to the grid during peak demand, independent of BTC price.
- Watch the data center occupancy rate each quarter — it signals whether the hosting pivot is accelerating or stalling.