Friday , 10 January 2025
Home Business Media TeraWulf’s Stock Tumbles Despite Major Data Center Deal and Strong Mining Performance
Media

TeraWulf’s Stock Tumbles Despite Major Data Center Deal and Strong Mining Performance

TeraWulf Inc. (NASDAQ: WULF), a prominent player in sustainable cryptocurrency mining and data center infrastructure, is experiencing significant market volatility despite recent operational achievements. The company’s stock has declined by 10.11% to $5.51 on Wednesday, January 8, 2025, marking a substantial drop from its previous close of $6.13.

This decline comes on the heels of TeraWulf’s announcement of securing a landmark deal with Core42 for high-performance computing data center leases worth over $1 billion across a 10-year term. The agreement encompasses more than 70 MW of digital infrastructure at the Lake Mariner facility in Upstate New York.

The company’s December 2024 performance metrics revealed impressive operational growth, with TeraWulf achieving 9.7 EH/s of installed self-mining capacity, representing a 94% year-over-year increase. During December, the company successfully mined 158 bitcoin at an average power cost of $62,805 per bitcoin ($0.078/kWh).

The infrastructure development continues to progress, with the construction of miner building 5 (MB-5, 50 MW) on schedule for completion in mid-Q1 2025. The company’s operational bitcoin mining capacity stands at 195 MW, with December’s average hash rate at 8.4 EH/s.

However, market sentiment has been affected by analyst updates, particularly from Roth Capital analyst Darren Aftahi, who revised TeraWulf’s 2024 loss projection to 17 cents per share, compared to the previous estimate of 9 cents per share.

Despite the current stock decline, Wall Street maintains an overall positive outlook on TeraWulf, with a Strong Buy consensus rating based on nine Buy and one Hold ratings. The average price target stands at $9.75, suggesting a potential 76.95% upside.

The company’s strategic pivot toward high-performance computing and data center operations is evident in its recent developments. The Core42 partnership includes the deployment of various infrastructure components, including the WULF Den (2.5 MW), CB-1 (20 MW), and CB-2 (50 MW), all of which have been fully funded.

TeraWulf’s commitment to environmental sustainability remains a cornerstone of its operations, utilizing predominantly zero-carbon energy sources, including hydroelectric and nuclear power, at its Lake Mariner facility, which is situated on the site of a former coal plant in Western New York.

Looking ahead, TeraWulf is actively pursuing additional tenants for the remaining 178 MW of near-term HPC hosting capacity at Lake Mariner. Core42 maintains an option for an additional 135 MW capacity for early 2026, indicating potential future growth

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Articles

Media

Delta Stock Soars as CEO Predicts Most Profitable Year in Company’s Century-Long History

Delta Air Lines (DAL) stock surged over 6% in premarket trading on...

Media

US Labor Market Surges Past Expectations: Economy Adds 256,000 Jobs in December as Unemployment Drops to 4.1%

The U.S. labor market demonstrated remarkable resilience at the close of 2024,...

Media

Blue Origin’s Historic New Glenn Launch Delayed to January 12 Due to Atlantic Weather Conditions

Jeff Bezos’ aerospace company Blue Origin has postponed the inaugural launch of...

Media

Taiwan Semiconductor Surges on Q4 Earnings Beat as AI Demand Fuels Growth

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSM) delivered another stellar quarter, with Q4 2024...