Blockchain-related equities have drawn renewed attention this month as traders look for ways to gain exposure to digital assets, infrastructure spending and the artificial intelligence build-out without holding cryptocurrencies directly. The latest list of heavily traded names spans miners, hosting providers, software groups and firms trying to connect blockchain more closely with mainstream finance, underscoring how broad the sector has become.
Core Scientific is one of the clearest examples of that shift. According to its corporate website, the company has repositioned itself as a provider of high-performance computing infrastructure and software, with operations across North America that now include Bitcoin mining, GPU cloud services and AI colocation. The company also said it sold about $175 million of Bitcoin in March 2026 to speed up expansion of its AI infrastructure, and it has stopped Bitcoin mining operations while continuing to push deeper into data-centre work.
Figure Technology Solutions represents a different strand of the market. The company describes itself as a blockchain-native capital marketplace, using on-chain systems for lending, trading and investing in credit and digital assets. Its Figure Connect platform is aimed at linking loan originators with capital-market partners, while a financing deal with Victory Park Capital in May 2025 marked what Figure called the first institutional sale of consumer crypto-backed loans. In November 2025, it also filed for a proposed blockchain-native class of equity securities.
Bitdeer Technologies Group remains tied to the infrastructure side of the trade, offering cloud hash-rate sharing, mining-power marketplaces and full hosting services alongside its own mining activity. The company says its model lets customers rent computing power rather than buy hardware outright, a structure that has become more attractive as investors weigh both blockchain demand and AI workloads. Globant, by contrast, sits further from pure crypto, but its blockchain services are part of a wider stack that includes cloud, AI and cybersecurity, according to the company’s website.
Other names on the list reflect more traditional mining and staking themes. Digihost Technology, a digital currency miner founded in 2017, continues to focus on running rigs and selling the coins it produces, while its US operations are presented as a way to navigate some regulatory pressures. BTCS is leaning into proof-of-stake infrastructure, offering validator services and products such as StakeSeeker and Builder+ as staking becomes more important across blockchain networks. Core Scientific’s warrant listing adds a more leveraged way to play the same story, though with greater risk if sentiment turns.
The broader appeal of these stocks comes from the same forces that have driven blockchain investing for years: the direction of Bitcoin, the economics of energy and compute, and the possibility that tokenisation and AI will give existing infrastructure owners new revenue streams. But the same characteristics that make the sector attractive also make it volatile, and the companies involved remain highly sensitive to crypto prices, regulation and capital spending cycles.
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Source: Noah Wire Services