On Monday, Cango Inc. confirmed it had completed the sale of 4,451 BTC on the open market, settling the transaction in USDT for roughly $305 million in net proceeds, according to a company statement. The bitcoin was sold over Feb. 7–8 and approved by Cango’s board as part of a balance-sheet strategy aimed at reducing leverage and repaying a bitcoin-collateralized loan.
The sale represents one of the largest confirmed miner liquidations so far in 2026 and follows an earlier January sale by Cango of roughly 550 BTC. After the February divestment, the company’s bitcoin holdings fell by about 60%, leaving it with just over 3,000 BTC, based on public disclosures.
Cango said the move was designed to strengthen its financial position while funding a strategic expansion into artificial intelligence (AI) compute infrastructure, leveraging its global energy and data-center footprint. Still, the timing places the company squarely inside a broader trend: miners selling bitcoin as economics tighten.
Bitcoin prices have spent much of early 2026 below levels many miners need to operate comfortably, while mining difficulty and competition remain high. That combination has dragged hashprice—the daily revenue earned per unit of computing power—to depressed levels, squeezing margins even for efficient operators.
When hashprice drops, miners face a blunt choice. Either they fund operations with cash reserves or equity, or they sell bitcoin to cover electricity, hosting, debt service, and expansion costs. For firms with leverage on the balance sheet, selling BTC often becomes the fastest release valve.
Cango is not alone. Riot Platforms sold roughly 1,080 BTC in January to help fund a major data-center land acquisition in Texas, while Cleanspark disclosed selling about 159 BTC the same month to support operations. Both sales were explicitly confirmed by the companies.
Meanwhile, Marathon Digital transferred more than 1,300 BTC to custodial and trading platforms in early February, a move widely interpreted as potential liquidation, though the company has not formally confirmed those coins were sold. Because of that uncertainty, Marathon’s activity remains classified as indicative rather than definitive.
Notably, bitcoin miner selling in 2026 has been selective rather than indiscriminate. Several large operators continue to hold most of their production, betting on a rebound in prices or offsetting bitcoin exposure with AI and high-performance computing contracts.
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Still, Cango’s 4,451 BTC sale stands out for its size and clarity. It underscores how quickly miners can move from accumulation to distribution when price, debt and operational costs collide.
If bitcoin prices remain subdued and hashprice stays compressed, analysts expect additional miner selling through the first half of the year. For now, Cango’s transaction offers a clear snapshot of how pressure travels from the mining floor straight onto the market.
- Why did Cango sell 4,451 BTC?
Cango sold the bitcoin to repay a bitcoin-collateralized loan and reduce financial leverage. - Are bitcoin miners selling more in 2026?
Yes, several miners have confirmed sales as low prices and thin hashprice pressure margins. - What is hashprice and why does it matter?
Hashprice measures daily mining revenue per unit of computing power and directly impacts miner profitability. - Is miner selling widespread?
So far, selling has been selective, with only a handful of firms confirming significant BTC liquidations.
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