MARA

MARA Holdings Price

Closed
MARA
$11,91
+$0,14(+%1,18)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-24 00:37 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-24 00:37, MARA Holdings (MARA) is priced at $11,91, with a total market cap of $4,50B, a P/E ratio of -2,43, and a dividend yield of %0,00. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $11,52 and $12,21. The current price is %3,38 above the day's low and %2,45 below the day's high, with a trading volume of 51,97M. Over the past 52 weeks, MARA has traded between $6,66 to $23,45, and the current price is -%49,21 away from the 52-week high.

MARA Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$11,23
Market Cap$4,50B
Volume51,97M
P/E Ratio-2,43
Dividend Yield (TTM)%0,00
Diluted EPS (TTM)3,70
Net Income (FY)-$1,31B
Revenue (FY)$907,09M
Earnings Date2026-05-07
EPS Estimate0,25
Revenue Estimate$178,41M
Shares Outstanding400,88M
Beta (1Y)5.305

About MARA

Marathon Digital Holdings, Inc. operates as a digital asset technology company that mines cryptocurrencies with a focus on the blockchain ecosystem and the generation of digital assets in United States. As of December 31, 2021, it had approximately 8,115 bitcoins, which included the 4,794 bitcoins held in the investment fund. The company was formerly known as Marathon Patent Group, Inc. and changed its name to Marathon Digital Holdings, Inc. in February 2021. Marathon Digital Holdings, Inc. was incorporated in 2010 and is headquartered in Las Vegas, Nevada.
SectorFinancial Services
IndustryFinancial - Capital Markets
CEOFrederick G. Thiel
HeadquartersLas Vegas,NV,US
Employees (FY)266,00
Average Revenue (1Y)$3,41M
Net Income per Employee-$4,93M

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MARA Holdings (MARA) is currently trading at $11,91, with a 24h change of +%1,18. The 52-week trading range is $6,66–$23,45.

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MARA Holdings (MARA) Latest News

2026-04-17 07:01

Listed Bitcoin Miners Sold Over 32,000 BTC in Q1 2026, Exceeding Full-Year 2025 Total

Gate News message, April 17 — Listed Bitcoin miners collectively sold over 32,000 BTC during the first quarter of 2026, according to Cointelegraph and TheMinerMag data, surpassing the entire 2025 annual sales volume and setting a new quarterly record. Major participants included MARA, CleanSpark, Riot, Cango, Core Scientific, and Bitdeer. Miner profitability faces mounting pressure as the current hash price stands at approximately $33 per day per PH/s, below the breakeven threshold of around $35 per day per PH/s for some mining operations. According to CryptoQuant, Bitcoin miner reserves have declined from over 1.86 million BTC to approximately 1.80 million BTC since 2023.

2026-04-13 10:05

U.S. premarket stocks for crypto-related names broadly fell, with MARA down 3.62%

Gate News report, on April 13, according to data from msx.com, crypto-related stocks in the U.S. were broadly lower before the market opened. Among them, MARA fell 3.62%; COIN fell 2.63%; SBET fell 2.45%; ABTC fell 1.49%. It is reported that msx.com is a decentralized RWA trading platform. It has cumulatively listed hundreds of RWA tokens, covering U.S. stock and ETF token targets such as AAPL, AMZN, GOOGL, META, MSFT, NFLX, and NVDA.

2026-04-09 01:32

U.S. stock market close: Crypto sector broadly rises, with ABTC up more than 10%

Gate News message, April 9th. Yesterday, the U.S. stock market closed higher: the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 2.85%, the S&P 500 Index rose 2.51%, and the Nasdaq rose 2.8%. The crypto sector rose across the board, with ABTC up more than 10.63%, BMNR up more than 6.69%, MARA up more than 6.03%, MSTR up more than 3.7%, and SBET up more than 2.88%. According to data from msx.com.

2026-04-07 08:46

Bitcoin miner MARA transfers $17 million in BTC, drawing market attention and sparking sell-off speculation

Gate News, a message. Bitcoin miner Marathon Digital Holdings (MARA) has once again drawn market attention recently. The company moved about 250 Bitcoins, valued at roughly $17.37 million. Earlier in early March, MARA had also carried out a large-scale liquidation of 15,133 Bitcoins, valued at nearly $1.1 billion. This series of actions has prompted traders and analysts to focus on its next strategic intentions. MARA’s fund transfers are not an isolated event, but part of its broader financial strategy. In recent weeks, the company has continued to make large Bitcoin movements, indicating that its operational focus is shifting from long-term holding to more active cash management. These moves may involve restructuring internal wallets, or may be intended to ensure liquidity or reduce market risk. Regardless of the motive, large-scale transfers are often seen by the market as potential sell signals, thereby affecting Bitcoin prices and overall market sentiment. Bitcoin activity by miners has a direct impact on market supply and traders’ psychology. Large transfers increase the number of Bitcoins available for circulation, which in the short term may bring downward pressure on prices, while also boosting exchange liquidity and creating opportunities for retail and institutional traders. Traders typically use wallet data to predict future trends, and when multiple miners carry out similar actions at the same time, market volatility may further increase. MARA’s move also reflects a shift in strategy across the mining industry as a whole. As operating costs rise, energy spending increases, and hardware upgrades become more necessary, miners are more inclined to optimize financial flexibility through strategic selling and fund transfers. As the Bitcoin market gradually matures, miners’ behavior has become an important indicator for judging market trends. Going forward, investors need to closely monitor fund movements by MARA and other large miners. These actions not only affect short-term Bitcoin price volatility, but also reveal a change in mining operating models—from a holding-based approach to an active cash management approach. The market is currently in a wait-and-see state, and each large Bitcoin transfer could trigger new price reactions and trading opportunities.

2026-04-07 01:06

MARA Transfers 250 BTC Worth $17.37M in Latest Transaction

Gate News message, Bitcoin miner MARA (@MARA) transferred out 250 BTC ($17.37M) 3 hours ago. MARA had previously sold 15,133 BTC ($1.1B) at an average price of approximately $72,689 between March 4 and March 25, 2026. As of February 26, 2026, MARA holds 53,822 BTC ($3.74B) and is the second-largest publicly traded holder of BTC after Strategy, according to Lookonchain.

Hot Posts About MARA Holdings (MARA)

ApeDegen

ApeDegen

32 minutes ago
I am observing a very interesting shift in the Bitcoin mining market lately. Miners are facing a tough decision: continue with traditional mining or transform their infrastructure into hosting services for AI companies. The context is clear. The demand for computational capacity for AI has become one of the largest sources of electricity consumption in the US recently. Meanwhile, Bitcoin miners are dealing with volatile prices and network difficulty at record levels. When you have 1 gigawatt of available capacity, the choice between mining or renting becomes increasingly strategic. Several players have already made this transition. Core Scientific converted much of its operation into AI hosting through a partnership with CoreWeave. Iris Energy and Hut 8 significantly increased their revenues with AI and high-performance computing. Companies like Riot Platforms, MARA Holdings, and Genius Group recently announced sales of over 19,000 bitcoins, signaling that relying solely on mining economics has become unsustainable given current prices and challenges. The logic behind this is simple. When you rent out your hashpower to AI companies, revenue follows pre-established contracts with predictable cash flow. When you mine pure Bitcoin, revenue fluctuates with the coin’s price and network difficulty. With Bitcoin at $69,000, difficulty at all-time highs, and energy costs rising while all industrial users compete for the same electricity, renting out hash capacity often yields higher returns. But this doesn’t mean Bitcoin mining will disappear. The network continues setting records above 1 zettahash/sec. What is changing is the business model. Miners who survive this cycle will likely no longer be energy companies producing Bitcoin. They will be specialized infrastructures with cheap electricity at scale, mining Bitcoin as a secondary activity while renting out their real asset — energy — to the AI industry, which can’t build data centers fast enough. It’s an interesting transformation in the sector.
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OffchainOracle

OffchainOracle

2 hours ago
I noticed an interesting trend in the behavior of major Bitcoin miners. Riot Platforms just reported Q1 sales — they released 3,778 BTC onto the market, earning $289.5 million. It sounds impressive, but here’s the catch: in the same quarter, they mined only 1,473 BTC. That is, they sold 2.6 times more than they produced. Their treasury dropped from 18,005 to 15,680 coins — an 18% decrease quarter-over-quarter. The first reaction: maybe the company is in trouble? But if you dig deeper, the picture is quite different. Riot simultaneously reduced energy costs by 21% year-over-year to 3 cents per kWh and increased hash rate by 26% to 42.5 EH/s. Plus, they earned $21 million from energy credits through renewable energy agreements. This is not the profile of a company losing money. It’s reinvesting capital into infrastructure during volatility. Riot is not alone in this. Last week, MARA Holdings, Genius Group, and Nakamoto Holdings together released 15,501 BTC. Genius completely liquidated its reserves. The industry is clearly shifting from simple accumulation to active treasury management — abandoning the old hold-all strategy that worked during the 2021 bull cycle. This is related to rising energy costs, which squeeze margins across the industry. Less efficient operators are shutting down — mining difficulty fell 7.7% to 133 trillion, and the network hash rate decreased roughly to 990 EH/s. Paradoxically, this benefits surviving miners like Riot: lower difficulty means higher block rewards. An important point: on the demand side, institutional investors are picking up some of this supply. Bitcoin ETFs saw inflows of $1.32 billion in March, breaking a four-month outflow trend. The current BTC price is around $77.97K ( minus 0.90% over 24 hours ), which is below levels discussed earlier. If the price doesn’t recover above $90K in the second quarter, Riot’s logic will remain defensive: liquidating assets to cover infrastructure expansion and energy costs. Until that happens, sales seem rational. This is not panic, but strategic redistribution amid pressure on the entire crypto sector. The next quarter will show whether this was just tactics or a sign of more serious problems.
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CoconutWaterBoy

CoconutWaterBoy

5 hours ago
I just reviewed MARA's Q4 results and the situation is quite severe. This Bitcoin mining company reported a loss of $1.7 billion in Q4 2025, a dramatic turn compared to the $528 million profit they had in the same period the previous year. The numbers are brutal when you see the full context. What's interesting is that Bitcoin production actually improved, the hashrate was stronger, but all that was overshadowed by the drop in BTC price. It went from $114,300 in September to $88,800 at the end of the year. That volatility directly impacted the value of the assets on the company's balance sheet. They had a negative adjustment of $1.5 billion just from revaluing their holdings. For the full year, MARA closed 2025 with a loss of $1.31 billion and $907.1 million in revenue. This contrasts with 2024 when they made $541 million. Bitcoin mining remains a volatile business exposed to crypto price cycles, that's clear. Now, what really stands out is the strategic shift they are making. They no longer want to be just a Bitcoin miner. They are investing in AI data centers and high-performance computing. They have a joint venture with Starwood Digital Ventures to build an initial capacity of over 1 GW, with plans to expand to 2.5 GW eventually. Additionally, in February, they acquired a 64% stake in Exaion to boost sovereign and enterprise AI deployments. This is the defensive strategy of modern miners. If you rely solely on Bitcoin mining, you're at the mercy of prices. But if you diversify into AI and data centers, you generate more stable income. MARA still holds 53,822 BTC on the balance sheet, valued at around $4.7 billion at the end-of-quarter prices, so they are not in a critical position. The stock fell nearly 46% in six months, reflecting the pressure these businesses face. Investors are watching whether they can truly execute this transition into AI without neglecting mining operations. The hybrid model they propose is interesting, but the proof is in the execution and how Bitcoin prices behave in the coming quarters. What I’m clear about is that traditional Bitcoin mining needs to evolve or diversify. Margins are shrinking, volatility is extreme, and companies that only bet on hodling or mining are at a disadvantage. MARA is trying to be more than that, and that’s probably the right long-term move, but the path is complicated.
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