TeraWulf rises after reporting Q1 earnings
TeraWulf, the bitcoin mining company transitioning into data center development, posted Q1 results that were essentially on par with expectations, but investors seemed to like the future transition from volatile bitcoin mining to a “more stable, contracted revenue model” revenue stream driven by “higher-value HPC workloads.”
TeraWulf reported:
Revenue of $34 million, just missing analyst expectations of $34.7 million.
An adjusted loss per share of $0.09, exactly meeting the consensus estimate from analysts polled by FactSet.
Around 62% of the firm’s Q1 revenue stemmed from high-performance computing lease revenue, “representing the initial ramp of long-term customer agreements,” TeraWulf CFO Patrick Fleury said.
“As we continue to scale, we expect the business to be increasingly driven by recurring, contracted revenue, reducing exposure to the volatility historically associated with bitcoin mining,” Fleury continued.
Fleury noted TeraWulf had $3.1 billion of cash to support its continued transition.