Momentum names are taking a beating on Wall Street, with many AI-related stocks leading that list.
Updated Oct 22, 2025, 3:30 p.m. Published Oct 22, 2025, 3:28 p.m.
Crypto-related stocks have been pummeled on Wednesday with recently high-flying bitcoin miners with artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure taking the biggest hit.
Bitfarms (BITF), Cipher Mining (CIFR), Hut 8 (HUT) and HIVE$0.1359 tumbled 10%-15% in the early hours of the session. Galaxy (GLXY), the digital asset investment firm with a growing data center operation, was beaten down 15% more than erasing all of its gains after Tuesday's earnings report.
The CoinShares Bitcoin Mining ETF (WGMI), a proxy for the sector, was 7% lower.
Crypto stocks outside of mining weren't spared either. Bakkt Holdings (BKKT), which surged over 300% earlier this month, sank another 7.5% and is now down almost 40% in a week. Strategy (MSTR), the world's largest corporate bitcoin holder, slipped 4% to below $290.
A check of other names like Coinbase (COIN), Robinhood (HOOD), Bullish (BLSH) and Gemini finds more sharp losses in the 5%-6% range.
Though still holding at the $108,000 area, bitcoin remained sizably lower after touching $114,000 on Tuesday. On Wall Street, the Nasdaq was sporting a 1% decline, with the chipmakers particularly hard hit.
BTC miners AI trade cools off
The steep drawdown in BTC miners suggest that their multi-month rally, fueled by investor optimism for obtaining lucrative data center deals, fizzled out as markets turned risk-off.
At the peak of the AI and high-performance computing bull run, the combined market capitalization of related companies exceeded $95 billion. It has since declined to around $82 billion, according to Farside data.
Bitfarms (BITF) surged more than 400% from September but has since fallen about 40%, now trading just above $4 per share. IREN (IREN), which was up roughly 400% year to date and 200% since September, is down around 30% from its all-time high of $73, currently trading near $52.
More For You

Stablecoin payment volumes have grown to $19.4B year-to-date in 2025. OwlTing aims to capture this market by developing payment infrastructure that processes transactions in seconds for fractions of a cent.
More For You
Andreessen Horowitz Says Crypto Has Entered a ‘New Era’ of Real Utility

The venture capital firm sees 2025 shaped by regulation, AI integration and a pivot to revenue-generating products.
What to know:
- Stablecoins are gaining traction among major financial institutions and now rival legacy payment networks in transaction volume, moving $46 trillion over the past year, according to a16z's State of Crypto 2025.
- Ethereum upgrades, Solana’s growth, and new privacy tools are pushing blockchain infrastructure closer to the scale and reliability of traditional financial systems, the report said.
- The report sees the year ahead as a turning point, with clearer U.S. regulations, tokenized real-world assets, and AI integration helping reshape crypto into a global economic platform.