Core Scientific has lined up a $500m loan from Morgan Stanley, with an option to double it.
- Core Scientific obtained a 364-day, $500m facility from Morgan Stanley, expandable to $1b.
- Proceeds will fund real estate, development costs and new energy contracts as the firm pivots toward AI workloads.
- The financing underscores rising Wall Street interest in bitcoin miners’ infrastructure and power assets.
Bitcoin (BTC) mining firm Core Scientific has secured a substantial financing line from Morgan Stanley, marking another sign that large banks see opportunity in the infrastructure underlying digital assets and high-performance computing.
The 364-day facility provides $500m in initial capacity with an option to increase the total to $1b, giving the company sizable firepower to expand and reconfigure its asset base. Core Scientific plans to use the proceeds to acquire and develop real estate, cover construction and development costs, and lock in new energy contracts—steps that support both its bitcoin mining operations and its push into hosting workloads for artificial intelligence and other compute-intensive applications.
The deal highlights how miners with significant power footprints and data center expertise are repositioning themselves as broader infrastructure providers rather than pure-play BTC proxies. By tapping a major institution like Morgan Stanley, Core Scientific is signaling both confidence in its growth trajectory and a willingness to tie its capital structure more closely to traditional credit markets. For the bank, the facility offers exposure to a blend of digital asset-linked cash flows and more conventional data center economics, potentially with collateral in the form of real estate and energy agreements.
Miners, AI and institutional credit
Core Scientific’s financing underscores a trend in which large miners seek to diversify revenue streams by courting AI and cloud clients, leveraging existing sites, cooling solutions and power contracts. As demand for training and inference capacity grows, miners with access to stable, relatively cheap energy are pitching themselves as attractive counterparts for hyperscalers and specialized AI firms. At the same time, they must balance these opportunities with the cyclical nature of bitcoin mining, where profitability can swing sharply with the BTC price and network difficulty.
For institutional lenders and investors, these dynamics create both risk and opportunity. Facilities like the one provided by Morgan Stanley allow banks to structure deals that are secured not just by digital assets but also by hard infrastructure and long-term contracts, potentially making them more palatable within existing risk frameworks. Successful execution could encourage more traditional institutions and platforms such as Coinbase’s institutional arm to deepen their engagement with miners through custody, hedging and capital markets services. As regulatory regimes, including MiCA-style frameworks abroad, bring greater clarity to digital asset activities, miners capable of demonstrating diversified, well-financed business models may find it easier to attract large-scale credit and equity capital.

