From 'Silicon Valley Sneaker' to 'GPU Hashrate': The Absurdity and Logic of Allbirds' Rebranding to NewBird AI
The sneaker seller is now getting into the mining business.
On April 15, Allbirds, the manufacturer of Merino wool athletic shoes, announced its transformation into an AI mining company, rebranding itself as "NewBird AI," causing its stock price to surge 582% at the close of the day.
At the time of the announcement, the company had just sold its shoe business for $39 million to the brand management company American Exchange Group, representing only 1% of its IPO peak valuation of $4 billion less than five years ago.
Allbirds' story follows the typical narrative of brand decline.
In 2016, it gained prominence in Silicon Valley with a pair of Merino wool running shoes, positioning itself as comfortable, environmentally friendly, and minimalist, becoming the standard uniform for tech workers. In November 2021, it went public on the Nasdaq, raising over $300 million in its IPO, with the market giving it a high valuation of $4 billion.
The minimalist design and the "sustainable" ethical halo perfectly matched the aesthetic genes of the tech industry. From Google co-founder Larry Page to former Twitter CEO Dick Costolo, and Apple CEO Tim Cook, venture capitalist Ben Horowitz, "Internet Queen" Mary Meeker, and even Jack Ma...


A saying began to circulate in Silicon Valley: "Wherever there are investors, you can almost always spot a pair of Allbirds."
But then the tide turned. The company spent money expanding physical stores, launching non-core products, and trying to capture Gen Z, but ended up failing on both ends. Existing customers felt it had changed, while new customers never arrived. Revenue continued to decline, with a net loss of $77.3 million in 2025, a 99% drop from its peak stock price, becoming a true "penny stock." In February 2026, all full-price retail stores in the United States were closed.
The company had already faced death once. What remained was a publicly traded shell on the Nasdaq and a few equity holders.
CEO Joe Vernachio, who took over as the firefighter after former co-founder Joey Zwillinger resigned in March 2024, made a bold decision.
Burn the shoes to the ground and play a new hand. After selling off its footwear assets, the company is left with money from the shoe sales, a listing on the Nasdaq, and a willingness to bet on the word "AI."
These three elements may be enough to support a new story in the market environment of 2026.

From Sneakers to GPUs: A Shell's Self-Redemption
The core of NewBird AI is a $50 million convertible bond financing from an "undisclosed institutional investor."
The company plans to use this money to purchase high-performance GPUs and lease them to AI developers and research institutions in a "GPU-as-a-Service" model. The wording in the official press release states: "North American data center vacancy rates are at historic lows, and the expected mid-2026 market launch of computing power has already been locked in. Enterprises, AI developers, and research institutions are unable to access the required computing power through hyperscale cloud providers or the spot market."
The market reality described in this statement is real. The supply of high-end GPUs like the H100 is indeed tight, with players like CoreWeave and Lambda Labs in the Neocloud space frantically raising funds to expand production, but the barriers to entry are very high. The question is, what position can $50 million hold in this battlefield?
The current high-end GPU leasing prices remain high, having increased by about 40% in early 2026. CoreWeave's latest round of financing reached several billion dollars. NewBird AI's $50 million entry is like walking into a tank battle with a small knife. More importantly, the official documents say nothing about where to buy the GPUs, how to ensure the supply chain, who will operate the data centers, or any of these crucial questions.
The identity of the placement agent is also worth noting. The underwriter for this $50 million convertible bond offering is Chardan Capital Markets, an investment bank that has deep expertise in SPACs and reverse mergers. Choosing Chardan is itself a signal, implying that the structure of this transaction is much more complex than a simple "internal transformation" and may be closer to a carefully crafted "shell" operation, just packaged as a narrative of autonomous transformation.
Who Benefits from This Frenzy?
There is a cautionary tale in the U.S. market.
In December 2017, the iced tea beverage company Long Island Iced Tea Corp. rebranded itself as Long Blockchain Corp., claiming to pivot to the blockchain business. The stock price surged 380% on the same day. However, the blockchain business never materialized, and Nasdaq subsequently delisted the company in 2018, citing "a series of false statements to investors and artificially inflated stock prices using the blockchain hype" as the reason. The SEC later delisted it, and several insiders were charged with insider trading.
The transformation of Allbirds bears a striking resemblance to this script: a publicly traded company whose core business has failed, an undisprovable new direction, the trendiest buzzword of the moment, and the subsequent stock price frenzy.
Of course, there are differences as well.
In 2026, the AI computing power demand is more substantial than the 2017 blockchain, with computing power shortage being a real industry bottleneck, not just a narrative. However, the "existence of demand" and whether "this company can capture that demand" are two completely different things.
On May 18, Allbirds/NewBird AI will hold a special shareholders' meeting to vote on asset sales and convertible bond financing. A special dividend is expected to be distributed to registered shareholders in Q3.
The timeline is worth pondering. On the day of the transformation announcement, the stock price surged by 582%, leaping from $2.49 to $16.99, with an intraday peak increase of over 800%. A large number of retail investors flocked in on the news, and the trading volume skyrocketed to over 150 million shares. Meanwhile, the shareholder meeting has not yet taken place, all trades are not officially settled, and the company has no actual operational record in AI business.
During this window, who has the most motivation and capability to convert their chips into cash? What is the equity structure of the executive team, and how has their holdings changed before and after the transformation announcement? What protections do the terms of the convertible bonds provide to the original investors? These questions currently have no answers in the public domain.
Selling the computer before the radiator is installed is a possible path in the 2026 "AI Transformation Wave."
Shell on the Crest of the Wave vs. Market beneath the Crest
The story of NewBird AI is a glimpse of the 2026 AI market.
In the current frenzy of computing power mining, the real players are NVIDIA, Microsoft, Amazon, CoreWeave investing billions, and large data center operators with national strategic endorsements. However, the characteristic of the capital market is: wherever the wind blows, the sand piles up. Every new concept attracts a group of companies eager to slap on the label, regardless of whether their main business is selling shoes, iced tea, or something else.
This does not mean that every "AI transformation" is a scam, but it also does not mean that every "AI transformation" will succeed. The cleverness of the market lies in sometimes driving up prices on a scam before it lands, and then taking off before reality tests it.
Investors in Allbirds, once captivated by the story of a merino wool shoe, then watched the stock price plummet by 99%. Now, the holders of the same stock ticker, perhaps an entirely new set of people, are being enthralled by another story.
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