Key Insights
- Ionic Digital’s stock went public on the Nasdaq, but the company did not issue any new shares.
- The liquidity of former Celsius creditors can be achieved via shares being publicly traded.
- The company continues shifting from Bitcoin mining to AI infrastructure with long-term contracted revenue.
Nasdaq moved closer to welcoming Ionic Digital after the company filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for a direct listing under the ticker IOND. The filing creates a public trading venue for existing shareholders instead of raising fresh capital, giving former Celsius creditors a potential path to sell shares received during the lender’s bankruptcy restructuring.
The proposed listing represents another milestone in the Celsius recovery process. It also highlights how Bitcoin mining companies continue shifting toward artificial intelligence infrastructure as demand for computing capacity grows.
Direct listing opens liquidity path for Celsius creditors
Ionic Digital submitted its registration statement on Monday, allowing registered shareholders to sell up to 10.8 million Class A shares once regulators declare the filing effective. The company said it will not receive proceeds from those sales because the transaction follows a direct listing structure rather than a traditional initial public offering.
The company emerged in January 2024 after acquiring Celsius Mining assets under the crypto lender’s court-approved restructuring plan. Celsius distributed roughly 37 million Class A shares in Ionic Digital to creditors, making them owners of the newly created mining business.

The Nasdaq listing now offers those shareholders an opportunity to access a public market after holding private equity for more than two years. Prior creditor distributions included over $3 billion in cryptocurrency, cash and other assets.In August 2025, Celsius made another $220.6 million in payouts, and it remains at 64.9% creditor recovery while it continues to hold the equity stake in Ionic Digital.
Unlike a conventional IPO, the proposed Nasdaq listing does not inject new funding into the company. Instead, it focuses on liquidity and market-based price discovery for existing investors. Ionic also warned that trading could experience elevated volatility because no underwriters will establish an offering price before shares begin changing hands.
AI infrastructure becomes the company’s primary growth strategy
While Ionic started as a Bitcoin mining operator, management has steadily redirected its business toward digital infrastructure supporting artificial intelligence and high-performance computing.
Its strategy centers on the Ward County property in Texas, which offers 234 megawatts of installed power capacity. The company decommissioned Bitcoin mining equipment at the site during December 2025 and began converting the facility for AI infrastructure use under a long-term lease with Nscale.
The agreement, signed in October 2025, runs for 126 months and carries approximately $1.95 billion in contracted revenue. Ionic also said the lease could expand by another 89 megawatts if it secures the required approvals and additional power capacity. That expansion would increase contracted revenue to roughly $2.6 billion.
Financial results already reflect the changing business model.
| Metric | Reported Result |
|---|---|
| Shares available for sale | 10.8 million |
| Ward County capacity | 234 MW |
| Nscale lease term | 126 months |
| Initial contracted revenue | $1.95 billion |
| Potential contracted revenue | $2.6 billion |
| Q1 2026 leasing revenue | $44 million |
| Q1 2026 mining revenue | $7.4 million |
| Mining revenue decline | 82% year over year |
| Private placement | $400 million |
During the first quarter of 2026, digital infrastructure leasing generated $44 million in revenue. Meanwhile, Bitcoin mining revenue declined 82% from the previous year to $7.4 million as mining operations scaled back.
Market signals extend beyond a single listing
Before pursuing the Nasdaq listing, Ionic completed a $400 million private equity placement that valued the company at a pre-money equity valuation of $2 billion. Management said the proceeds will support general corporate purposes, including continued investment in digital infrastructure.
Chief Executive Andy Stewart said the financing strengthens the company’s capital position and supports long-term infrastructure development. Investors participating in the funding included Attestor, Oaktree Capital Management, Sachem Head Capital Management, Citadel, and Weiss Asset Management.
The shift is indicative of a broader trend in the digital asset industry. In the past, demand for data center energy has been growing and a number of mining companies have begun to shift energy-intensive operations into AI computing. With successful blockchain mining, an asset has been created, not just for mining cryptocurrencies.
Conclusion
The listing on the Nasdaq is indeed a public market debut for Ionic Digital, but it’s so much more. It will give Celsius’ debtors a chance to liquidate their holding and gauge investor faith in Celsius’ shift from Bitcoin mining to AI infrastructure.
Investors will watch closely as trading nears as well as revenue growth from leasing and new power capacity approvals, and if the company’s long-term contracts will supplant waning mining revenue. The success of the Nasdaq listing may also have implications for the strategy other crypto mining companies will use as they seek to establish themselves as AI infrastructure providers.









