Key Takeaways
- The company recorded a Q4 loss of $1.66 per share, significantly worse than the projected $0.16 loss.
- Quarterly revenue reached $35.8 million, falling short of the $44.1 million analyst forecast.
- Bitcoin’s dramatic decline from approximately $125,000 to around $60,000 severely impacted mining operations.
- Annual revenue for 2025 increased to $168.5 million compared to $140.1 million the previous year.
- The company has locked in $12.8 billion worth of AI and HPC agreements while targeting 2.8 GW capacity expansion.
TeraWulf (WULF) delivered disappointing fourth-quarter 2025 results as cryptocurrency market volatility severely impacted its Bitcoin mining operations.
The mining company disclosed a quarterly loss of $1.66 per share for Q4. This represents a substantial deterioration compared to the $0.21 per share loss recorded in the corresponding period last year. Wall Street analysts had projected a more modest $0.16 per share loss.
Quarterly revenue registered at $35.8 million, marking a decline from the $50.6 million achieved in Q3 2025. Market analysts had anticipated revenue of $44.1 million.
Breaking down the Q4 revenue, digital asset operations contributed $26.1 million while high-performance computing (HPC) services generated $9.7 million.
The financial results reflect a straightforward reality: the cryptocurrency downturn throughout late 2025 severely pressured mining companies.
Bitcoin experienced a steep descent from approximately $125,000 in early October to roughly $60,000 by February 2026, based on TradingView data. Currently, BTC trades at $67,982 — notably beneath the estimated mining cost of $87,310 per coin calculated by MacroMicro.
Strategic Shift Toward AI Infrastructure
TeraWulf has been proactively repositioning its business model. The firm is making aggressive moves into artificial intelligence infrastructure and HPC leasing operations.
The company has locked down 522 MW through long-term IT lease agreements, representing roughly $12.8 billion in contracted revenue alongside more than $6.5 billion in secured long-term financing.
“We enter 2026 with 522 critical IT MW of contracted HPC capacity and a gross 2.9-GW multi-regional platform designed for long-term expansion,” CEO Paul Prager said.
Looking at the complete 2025 fiscal year, revenue climbed to $168.5 million from $140.1 million in 2024 — demonstrating positive momentum despite the challenging fourth quarter.
CTO Nazar Khan added: “We are advancing build schedules and optimizing design to support next-generation AI workloads at scale.”
Aggressive Growth Strategy
TeraWulf has outlined plans to incorporate a Kentucky facility (MISO) and a Maryland location (PJM) into its infrastructure portfolio during 2026.
These two strategic acquisitions are projected to deliver an additional 1.5 GW of capacity, effectively more than doubling the company’s existing operational footprint. Combined owned platform capacity would approach approximately 2.8 GW distributed across five distinct locations.
According to company statements, these facilities can accommodate 250–500 MW of critical IT capacity on an annual basis, expanding in tandem with artificial intelligence sector growth.
Investor sentiment remains cautious, however. WULF shares declined as market participants evaluate the implementation challenges associated with such an ambitious business transformation.
The stock has dropped 0.22% during current trading, although its year-to-date trajectory maintains a healthy gain of approximately 55.96%.
Development continues at TeraWulf’s Lake Mariner and Abernathy locations, with the company currently valued at a market capitalization of $7.35 billion.



