TeraWulf’s HPC revenue tops Bitcoin mining for first time as AI pivot accelerates

1 hour ago 1



TeraWulf’s Q1 2026 results show $21 million in AI/HPC hosting revenue versus under $13 million from Bitcoin mining, marking the first quarter where high‑performance compute has overtaken BTC as the company’s primary revenue driver.

Summary

  • TeraWulf generated $21 million from high-performance computing (HPC) hosting in Q1, surpassing less than $13 million from Bitcoin mining for the first time.
  • Total Q1 revenue was $34 million, roughly flat year-on-year, while net loss widened to $427.6 million due largely to a non‑cash warrant revaluation.
  • The company is rapidly converting mining infrastructure into AI/HPC data center capacity, a trend mirrored by rivals like Riot Platforms as miners recast themselves as “compute infrastructure” providers.

TeraWulf’s latest earnings show its business model tilting decisively away from pure Bitcoin mining and toward rented compute for AI and cloud workloads.

In its first-quarter 2026 results, the company reported total revenue of $34 million, with HPC leasing income reaching $21 million and digital asset mining bringing in just under $13 million, according to its earnings release. That marks the first time HPC has overtaken Bitcoin as TeraWulf’s primary revenue driver and follows several quarters of ramp-up at its Lake Mariner facility in New York.

A summary from NS3.AI, cited by Binance’s news feed, noted that Q1 revenue was “relatively stable compared to the same period last year,” but emphasized that the revenue mix has flipped, with more than 60% now coming from HPC hosting. MarketBeat’s transcript of the company’s earnings call highlights the same shift, describing Q1 as “a business in transition from volatile Bitcoin mining revenue to stable, credit-backed, contracted HPC revenue streams.”

From volatile mining to contracted AI compute

Chief financial officer Patrick Fleury told analysts that TeraWulf is deliberately swapping out exposure to Bitcoin’s price cycle for multi‑year, fixed‑fee compute deals. “In summary, 1Q reflects a business in transition from volatile Bitcoin mining revenue to stable contracted HPC revenue,” he said on the call, adding that “mining continues to strategically support this transition” while the company brings more AI capacity online.

The shift is already visible in operations. TeraWulf disclosed that it has 60 megawatts of HPC capacity generating revenue at its Lake Mariner data center and plans to expand that footprint over the rest of 2026. A prior 2025 update said the firm had begun building “dedicated HPC data halls” and remained on track to deliver 72.5 MW of gross HPC hosting infrastructure to Abu Dhabi’s Core42 unit, underlining that its growth market is now AI infrastructure, not new ASIC halls.

Financially, the quarter still looked messy. MarketBeat data show that the company’s net loss widened to about $427.6 million, driven in large part by a non‑cash loss on warrant revaluation as its share price and capital structure shifted. But Fleury stressed that underlying cash generation is improving as more HPC contracts ramp, and that “with more than 50% of first quarter 2026 revenue derived from HPC hosting, and additional compute capacity expected to come online in the second quarter and throughout the remainder of the year, we expect our revenue mix to continue shifting toward stable, contracted HPC hosting revenues backed by investment-grade counterparties,” according to a preliminary statement.

Miners race to become AI infrastructure plays

TeraWulf is not alone in this pivot. Riot Platforms has already reported its own first-quarter 2026 results, showing $167.22 million in total revenue, including $33.2 million from data center operations tied to AI and cloud customers, according to a Yahoo Finance recap. Reuters recently reported that activist investor Starboard Value is pressing Riot to “speed up AI data center deals,” arguing that the company is “well‑positioned to capitalize on booming demand for artificial intelligence infrastructure” thanks to its cheap power and existing campuses.

Crypto.news has chronicled this evolution in a broader story on miners’ post‑halving strategies, noting that firms from TeraWulf to Riot and Core Scientific are increasingly describing themselves as “compute infrastructure” companies rather than simply miners. Another crypto.news story contrasted the economics of AI compute versus Bitcoin mining, pointing out that long‑term AI contracts can offer steadier returns than block rewards in a high‑hashrate, high‑difficulty environment.

TeraWulf’s Q1 numbers show that shift moving from pitch deck to P&L. If AI demand for power‑dense, low‑latency data centers keeps rising and BTC’s economics remain cyclical and margin‑compressed, more miners are likely to follow — turning the “hashrate arms race” into a broader fight for who controls the world’s cheapest and most scalable compute.

Read Entire Article