Shares of Core Scientific (CORZ) experienced significant upward momentum following the announcement of a strategic acquisition designed to enhance power infrastructure capabilities in Oklahoma. The stock gained 10.88%, reaching $24.61 in early market activity, as investors responded positively to the company’s aggressive expansion into high-density colocation services. This strategic move further solidifies Core Scientific’s commitment to building artificial intelligence infrastructure and enterprise-scale computing facilities.
Core Scientific, Inc., CORZ
Core Scientific revealed its intention to purchase Polaris DS LLC in a transaction valued at $421 million, significantly expanding its Muskogee, Oklahoma footprint. This acquisition delivers 440 megawatts of power capacity under contract with Oklahoma Gas & Electric. The move is expected to accelerate the timeline for deploying advanced high-density computing infrastructure.
The transaction requires regulatory clearance and satisfaction of customary closing requirements, with completion anticipated during Q3 2026. Polaris currently maintains an active 40-acre campus located adjacent to Core Scientific’s current Muskogee operations. The property features established electric service contracts and substation facilities that enable additional expansion opportunities.
According to Core Scientific, this strategic purchase directly supports the organization’s objective of achieving approximately 1 gigawatt of leasable power infrastructure. The company has secured control of nearly 250 additional acres earmarked for future development initiatives. This comprehensive approach integrates targeted acquisitions, new construction projects, and flexible power delivery systems throughout its Oklahoma portfolio.
Core Scientific has strategically repositioned itself away from conventional Bitcoin mining operations toward artificial intelligence and high-performance computing services. As a result, the organization continues repurposing previous mining locations into enterprise-grade colocation facilities. The Muskogee expansion exemplifies this broader operational evolution.
Development work is currently underway on an additional 82.5 megawatt facility within the Muskogee campus complex. Initial delivery is projected for Q4 2027. Simultaneously, the existing 70 megawatt structure remains scheduled for customer handover in the second quarter of 2026.
This leased infrastructure accommodates Nvidia GB300 systems and is presently undergoing comprehensive testing and commissioning procedures. Core Scientific continues conducting detailed load assessments designed to maximize grid-connected capacity throughout the location. Additionally, the company has engineered behind-the-meter power configurations to facilitate future scalability needs.
Cryptocurrency mining companies are increasingly diversifying into artificial intelligence and computing-oriented operations amid challenging mining profitability conditions. As a consequence, infrastructure holdings and long-duration power contracts have become highly valued strategic assets. Organizations controlling substantial energy resources are actively expanding into colocation and compute hosting markets.
Core Scientific’s most recent quarterly financials indicated total revenue decreased to $79.8 million compared to $94.9 million in the prior-year period. However, colocation revenue demonstrated substantial growth, climbing to $31 million from $8.5 million year-over-year. Conversely, Bitcoin mining revenue contracted to $42 million from $79 million.
The organization has also executed substantial financing arrangements to fund its expansion roadmap earlier this year. Core Scientific completed a $3.3 billion private debt placement complemented by $1 billion in loan facilities. Separately, shareholders voted against a proposed $9 billion combination with CoreWeave, though both entities maintain ongoing commercial relationships.
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