Bitfarms (BITF) Hires Six Executives to Lead HPC/AI Pivot as Stock Drops 8%
Bitfarms is stacking its leadership bench with six industry veterans as the Bitcoin miner races to reinvent itself as an AI data center operator. The Toronto-based company announced Monday it hired executives spanning construction, power development, permitting, and finance—all based out of a new New York office that signals its U.S. ambitions.
BITF shares traded at $2.04 on March 9, down 8.31% over 24 hours, giving the company a market cap of $1.22 billion. The stock weakness comes despite proxy advisory firm ISS recommending shareholders approve Bitfarms' U.S. redomiciliation plan just days earlier on March 5.
The most notable hire is Christopher Ruppel as SVP of Power, poached directly from competitor MARA Holdings where he ran energy development. Ruppel's resume includes originating 4 GW of energy projects globally and structuring billions in project financings—exactly the skill set Bitfarms needs to monetize its 2.1 GW North American energy portfolio.
"Building a seasoned domestic leadership bench is essential," CEO Ben Gagnon said. The new hires average 20-plus years in digital and power infrastructure.
Construction and Operations Muscle
Michael Byrne joins from Linesight and Aurecon to oversee construction execution. His background in hyperscale data center delivery across three continents addresses a critical gap—Bitfarms has energy assets but limited experience building the high-density facilities AI workloads demand.
Paul Peterson, formerly with JLL Global and CBRE, takes VP of HPC Operations. Kevin Roberts brings two decades of permitting experience, having shepherded over 50 natural gas facilities and 1,000 miles of pipeline through regulatory approval.
Financial Firepower from Stronghold Deal
Thomas Tyree III arrives as SVP of Finance & Strategy after serving on Stronghold Digital Mining's executive team. He led Stronghold's IPO and the strategic review that ultimately resulted in its sale to Bitfarms—so he knows the company's newly acquired assets intimately.
Tara Goldstein rounds out the hires as SVP of Marketing, bringing experience from Brookfield Properties where she handled positioning for a 98-million-square-foot global portfolio.
The Bigger Picture
This hiring spree follows Bitfarms' February 24 filing for shareholder approval of its U.S. redomiciliation, potentially under a new "Keel Infrastructure" brand. The company is betting that Bitcoin miners sitting on cheap power contracts can pivot to more lucrative AI compute customers.
Whether that thesis plays out depends on execution. Bitfarms now has the executives—the question is whether they can convert energy assets into contracted AI revenue before the window closes. Shareholders vote on the U.S. move at an upcoming special meeting, with ISS backing the plan.