The bitcoin mining industry is facing a severe hashrate shakeout, leading many independent operators to cease operations. In response, Hash2cash is pushing a high-tech rebranding by tokenizing hashrates on the TON blockchain.
As the bitcoin mining industry grapples with a brutal hashrate shakeout that has forced many independent operators to unplug, some in the cloud mining sector are attempting a high-tech rebranding. Leading this charge is Hash2cash, a cloud mining platform that recently claimed it is revolutionizing the industry by tokenizing hashrates on the TON blockchain and integrating directly with Telegram.
The move comes at a critical juncture. With bitcoin prices oscillating between $68,000 and $72,000—well below the estimated $81,800 average production cost—some retail investors have looked toward industrial-scale cloud providers to maintain exposure to mining rewards while professional, publicly traded firms report significant quarterly losses.
Cloud mining has historically been dogged by accusations of selling “paper hashrate,” a practice where providers sell more computing power than they actually possess. When asked how users can verify the physical existence of their assets, Anastasia Khizhnyakova, Product Manager at Hash2cash, pointed to a multilayered verification strategy.
“We take ‘paper hashrate’ very seriously,” the representative said. “Unlike competitors who offer nothing beyond a dashboard number, we provide a publicly accessible watcher link showing our pool hashrate measured in petahashes per second (PH/s), with our project name explicitly listed as the contributor.”
The company claims this “watcher link” allows any user to independently verify, in real time, that the physical machines are active and contributing to the global network. “This is not manufactured on a spreadsheet; it is genuinely on-chain,” Khizhnyakova added.
Central to the Hash2cash pitch is a formal hosting partnership with IBMM, an industrial mining operator in Russia. When pressed on how the platform can project a 50% to 60% annual return on investment (ROI) while U.S.-listed giants like Marathon Digital and Riot Platforms face narrowing margins, the company cited a “structural cost advantage.”
“Our partnership with IBMM gives us access to significantly below-market electricity rates and optimized industrial-scale infrastructure,” Khizhnyakova said. “That alone changes the economics dramatically compared to, say, a Nasdaq-listed miner paying premium U.S. power rates.”
In a market where many competitors are repurposing their data centers for artificial intelligence, Hash2cash is taking a different path. When asked if their infrastructure possesses the “dark fiber” and high-level redundancy required to pivot to AI hosting, the Product Manager was candid.
“Our current infrastructure is purpose-built for hydro-cooled bitcoin mining, not AI GPU workloads—and we won’t pretend otherwise,” Khizhnyakova said.
Instead of a pivot, the company is betting on endurance. “We maintain operational reserves—both in working capital and in BTC holdings—specifically designed to weather extended low-margin periods. Our lean cost structure means our breakeven threshold is materially lower than most competitors.”
Meanwhile, the emergence of tokenized hashrate raises a fundamentally important question: Does concentrating physical hardware under one management team centralize the network, or does it decentralize the industry by spreading ownership?
Hash2cash argues the latter. “Tokenized hashrate is net positive for decentralization at the ownership layer, even if the physical hardware remains concentrated,” the team said. “Today, retail participants are largely priced out entirely. H2C lowers the barrier to entry so that anyone, anywhere, can hold a claim on real mining power.”
The company acknowledges the tension of physical centralization but claims it is a necessary trade-off for industrial efficiency. “The economic ownership of that hashrate is distributed across thousands of token holders globally. We think that’s a meaningful step toward democratizing an industry that has quietly become one of the most concentrated in crypto.”
Despite the technical transparency, analysts remain cautious. While Hash2cash promises “flexible, market-linked” returns, its “no KYC” policy and reliance on offshore infrastructure in Russia place it outside the scope of most Western digital asset regulations, such as the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation.
Furthermore, with production costs remaining high, the success of the endurance strategy depends heavily on a significant price recovery or the continued stability of the Russian regulatory environment, which has recently seen new oversight measures introduced for 2026.