RIOT

Riot Platforms Price

RIOT
$17.01
-$1.12(-6.17%)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-15 16:00 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-15 16:00, Riot Platforms (RIOT) is priced at $17.01, with a total market cap of $6.86B, a P/E ratio of -6.50, and a dividend yield of 0.00%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $16.81 and $18.20. The current price is 1.18% above the day's low and 6.53% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 17.87M. Over the past 52 weeks, RIOT has traded between $7.40 to $23.93, and the current price is -28.91% away from the 52-week high.

RIOT Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$17.37
Market Cap$6.86B
Volume17.87M
P/E Ratio-6.50
Dividend Yield (TTM)0.00%
Dividend Amount$1.00
Diluted EPS (TTM)1.95
Net Income (FY)-$663.18M
Revenue (FY)$647.43M
Earnings Date2026-07-30
EPS Estimate0.23
Revenue Estimate$140.98M
Shares Outstanding395.49M
Beta (1Y)3.571
Ex-Dividend Date2017-10-12
Dividend Payment Date2017-10-18

About RIOT

Riot Platforms, Inc., together with its subsidiaries, operates as a Bitcoin mining company in the United States. The company operates in two segments, Bitcoin Mining and Engineering. It offers comprehensive and critical infrastructure for institutional-scale Bitcoin mining facilities in Rockdale and Navarro counties, Texas; and two Bitcoin mining sites in Paducah, Kentucky. The company also designs and manufactures power distribution equipment and custom engineered electrical products; and electricity distribution product design, manufacturing, and installation services for large-scale commercial and governmental customers, as well as data center, power generation, utility, water, industrial, and alternative energy markets. The company was founded in 2000 and is based in Castle Rock, Colorado.
SectorFinancial Services
IndustryFinancial - Capital Markets
CEOJason Les
HeadquartersCastle Rock,CO,US
Employees (FY)816.00
Average Revenue (1Y)$793.42K
Net Income per Employee-$812.72K

Learn More about Riot Platforms (RIOT)

Gate Learn Articles

Overview of Public Companies Holding BTC

This article provides an in-depth analysis of major public companies holding Bitcoin globally. As of December 2024, approximately 50 public companies worldwide hold Bitcoin, spanning sectors including technology, finance, and more. The article highlights four major Bitcoin-holding companies: MicroStrategy with 439,000 bitcoins, Marathon Digital Holdings with 44,394 bitcoins, and Riot Platforms with 17,429 bitcoins. These companies demonstrate their confidence in and strategic positioning towards digital currency through their various approaches to participating in the Bitcoin market.

2025-01-03

Gate Research: Weekly Hot Topic Roundup (Dec 09–Dec 13, 2024)

This roundup covers key blockchain industry developments from December 9 to 13. Liquid staking protocols reached a total value locked (TVL) of $70.9 billion, with Lido leading the market. Circle plans to launch CCTP V2 in 2025 to improve cross-chain stablecoin transfers. Magic Eden launched its $ME token airdrop, generating strong market interest. Riot Platforms secured $525 million in financing and expanded its Bitcoin holdings. Grayscale launched new trust funds for Lido and Optimism, attracting investor attention to the Ethereum ecosystem. These developments demonstrate the blockchain industry's continued innovation and growth.

2024-12-13

Top 10 Bitcoin Mining Companies

This article examines the business operations, market performance, and development strategies of the world's top 10 Bitcoin mining companies in 2025. As of January 21, 2025, the Bitcoin mining industry's total market capitalization has reached $48.77 billion. Industry leaders like Marathon Digital and Riot Platforms are expanding through innovative technology and efficient energy management. Beyond improving mining efficiency, these companies are venturing into emerging fields such as AI cloud services and high-performance computing—marking Bitcoin mining's evolution from a single-purpose industry into a diversified, global business model.

2025-02-13

Riot Platforms (RIOT) FAQ

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Riot Platforms (RIOT) is currently trading at $17.01, with a 24h change of -6.17%. The 52-week trading range is $7.40–$23.93.

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Hot Posts About Riot Platforms (RIOT)

ShizukaKazu

ShizukaKazu

3 hours ago
Nasdaq hits new highs soon, is the bull market back? The war isn't over yet, but the market seems to be pricing it in early. Almost all assets are rising Since March 27, the S&P 500 has rebounded nearly 10%, aiming for its third consecutive week of gains. The Nasdaq 100 rose even more, up about 12% in total, marking ten straight trading days of gains, the longest streak since 2021. U.S. stocks closed higher: Dow up 0.66%, S&P up 1.18%, Nasdaq up 1.96%. Crypto-related stocks surged across the board: Robinhood rose over 10% in a single day, Circle nearly 7%, Coinb 5.65%, Riot 4.32%. The Japanese and Korean markets are also following suit. The Nikkei 225 opened up 0.71%, breaking 58,000 points for the first time since March. The KOSPI opened up 2.98%, at 6,145.62 points. On the Bitcoin side, on Tuesday, it reached a high of $76,120, a new high since February 6, successfully reclaiming the critical support zone of $75,000. Analyst CryptoBlockto pointed out that Bitcoin has broken above the ascending triangle’s upper trendline at $73,000, with the daily RSI rising to 63. The next target is $80,000, with a measured move to $89,050, about 18% above the current price. On-chain Bitcoin data is even more noteworthy. Since 2026, the average daily number of Bitcoin transactions has increased by 62%, reaching 765,130 on April 5, a 17-month high. Analyst CW8900 said directly: "The current daily Bitcoin transaction count is higher than when BTC was at $120,000, indicating a bullish market behavior." Of course, not everything is optimistic. Crypto market funding rates show that both BTC and ETH on major platforms like Bn are in negative territory, with short positions paying longs to maintain their positions. Sentiment-wise, bearish signals have not yet dissipated. But the market seems to be rising on expectations of an end to the war. Goldman Sachs' Delta One head Rich Privorotky explained well: "The market seems to have declared victory in the war with Iran, even though the conflict itself isn't truly over." Tom Lee's interpretation is even more straightforward. In an interview with CNBC, he said defense spending is currently about $30 billion per month, potentially rising to $60 billion, which has a significant stimulative effect on the economy. Oil prices have risen by $20, adding about $12 billion per month to household burdens. "Overall, the war is actually helping corporate profits right now." He cited World War II as a precedent: U.S. stocks bottomed in May 1942, just five months after entering the war, when not a single soldier had yet set foot on European or Pacific battlefields. "Markets are good at pricing in outcomes in advance. The fact that stocks are rising means the market is pricing in a favorable outcome." The upcoming second round of negotiations, which may be facilitated by geopolitical easing, could be the reason for this. Trump reiterated on Fox News on April 14: "The Iran conflict is nearing its end." He added, "I think Iran really wants to reach an agreement now." He also revealed to the New York Post that a new round of US-Iran talks "may take place in Pakistan within the next two days." This follows the "long but inconclusive" Islamabad meeting last Saturday. The US and Iran announced a two-week ceasefire on April 8 Beijing time, with a deadline of April 22. According to Russian sources citing Arab diplomatic officials, discussions to extend the ceasefire are ongoing. Who will represent the US? Trump hasn't clarified, but confirmed he won't attend himself. According to CNN sources, if a new face-to-face meeting can be arranged before the ceasefire expires, Vice President Vance is expected to lead the second round of negotiations. Vance said he will continue efforts to secure the "big deal" Trump hopes to reach with Iran. After the news broke, WTI crude oil plunged about 4% in the Asian session on Wednesday. Meanwhile, shipping through the Strait of Hormuz is improving. According to WSJ, over the past 24 hours, more than 20 cargo ships, container ships, and oil tankers have crossed the strait, though still only a small fraction of pre-war levels. BCA Research chief US investment strategist Doug Peta said: "As earnings season kicks off, company fundamentals are now more strongly driving stock prices than headlines about Iran." The noise of war persists. But the market is choosing to look forward.
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defi_detective

defi_detective

4 hours ago
Just noticed something wild happening in the mining space that most people are glossing over. The publicly listed crypto mining companies are basically having an existential crisis right now, and they're solving it in a way that's fundamentally changing what they actually are. So here's the situation. These miners are losing roughly $19,000 on every bitcoin they produce. The weighted average cash cost to mine one BTC hit about $80,000 in Q4 2025, but Bitcoin's been hanging around $73,999 lately. Those numbers obviously don't work, which is why we're seeing something unprecedented. Instead of just accepting it, these companies are pivoting hard into AI and high-performance computing infrastructure. And I'm not talking about a small side project either. Over $70 billion in cumulative AI and HPC contracts have been announced across the public mining sector. CoreWeave's deal with Core Scientific alone is worth $10.2 billion over 12 years. TeraWulf has $12.8 billion in contracted HPC revenue. Hut 8 locked in a $7 billion, 15-year lease for AI infrastructure. This isn't incremental—it's a complete transformation. What's crazy is the math behind it. Bitcoin mining infrastructure costs roughly $700,000 to $1 million per megawatt, but AI infrastructure runs $8 to $15 million per megawatt. Yet AI offers structurally higher returns with margins above 85% and multi-year revenue visibility. By the end of 2026, some of these crypto mining companies could be pulling 70% of their revenue from AI, up from about 30% today. Core Scientific is already at 39% AI revenue. They're becoming data center operators who happen to still mine Bitcoin on the side. The financing is where it gets interesting. They're funding this transition two ways. First, massive debt. IREN is carrying $3.7 billion in convertible notes. TeraWulf has $5.7 billion in total debt. Cipher Digital issued $1.7 billion in senior secured notes in November, and their quarterly interest expense jumped from $3.2 million to $33.4 million in Q4 alone. These are infrastructure-scale bets, not mining-scale debt loads. Second, they're liquidating Bitcoin. Core Scientific sold about 1,900 BTC worth $175 million in January and is planning to sell substantially all remaining holdings in Q1 2026. Bitdeer went to zero BTC in February. Riot Platforms sold 1,818 BTC worth $162 million in December. Even Marathon, the largest public holder with 53,822 BTC, quietly expanded its policy in March to authorize sales from its entire balance sheet. The loan-to-value ratio on their $350 million Bitcoin-backed credit facility hit 87% as prices fell. Here's the tension though. These are the same companies securing the Bitcoin network. When mining becomes unprofitable and AI becomes lucrative, the rational move is to reallocate capital away from mining. But if enough miners do that, network security shrinks. The hashrate already shows this. The network peaked at roughly 1,160 exahashes per second in October 2025 and has since dropped to about 920 EH/s, with three consecutive negative difficulty adjustments—the first streak like that since July 2022. The market has already priced this bifurcation. Miners with secured HPC contracts trade at 12.3 times next-twelve-month sales. Pure-play miners trade at 5.9 times. The market is paying more than double for the AI exposure, which just reinforces the incentive to pivot further. Geographically, the U.S., China, and Russia now control roughly 68% of global hashrate, with the U.S. gaining about 2 percentage points in Q4 alone. But Paraguay and Ethiopia are entering the top 10 mining countries, driven by HIVE's 300-megawatt operation and Bitdeer's 40-megawatt facility. CoinShares forecasts hashrate reaching 1.8 zetahashes by end of 2026 and 2 zetahashes by March 2027, but that depends on Bitcoin recovering to around $100,000 by year-end. If prices stay below $80,000, hash price keeps falling and more miners exit. Below $70,000 could trigger larger capitulation. Next-generation hardware like Bitmain's S23 and Bitdeer's SEALMINER A3 operating below 10 joules per terahash could roughly halve energy costs, but deploying them requires capital that miners are directing toward AI instead. So here's what it comes down to. The bitcoin mining industry entered this cycle as a group of companies securing the network and accumulating Bitcoin. It's exiting as a group building AI data centers and selling Bitcoin to fund them. Whether this is temporary or permanent depends entirely on one thing: Bitcoin's price. If it hits $100,000, mining margins recover and the AI pivot slows. If it stays at $70,000 or below, the transition accelerates and the mining sector as we knew it disappears into something completely different.
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