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TeraWulf (WULF) has $12.8B in long-term contracted revenue backed by Google credit-enhanced leases and $3.27B in cash, providing rare visibility among bitcoin-adjacent companies. The company is delivering multiple high-performance computing facilities through 2026, with HPC lease revenue growing 35% quarter-over-quarter to $9.70M in Q4 2025, converting 522 MW of contracted capacity into recurring cash flow.
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TeraWulf’s stock pullback from recent highs reflects typical volatility as the company executes its HPC build-out schedule, though contracted revenue and on-time facility deliveries through 2026 anchor cash flow visibility.
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TeraWulf (NASDAQ:WULF) has pulled back sharply from its recent highs, sliding -10% over the past month and currently trading at $14.22. Despite a remarkable 340% one-year run, the stock sits 22% off its 52-week high of $18.51. Most Wall Street analysts carry more measured outlooks, but Keefe Bruyette is holding firm with an Outperform rating and a $23 price target. The broader analyst consensus sits at $25.33, with 13 analysts rated 100% bullish. Keefe Bruyette maintains its Outperform rating with a $23 price target, citing the contracted revenue foundation and HPC build-out schedule as key factors in its outlook.
Keefe Bruyette trimmed its target modestly from $24 to $23 but maintained its Outperform rating, maintaining its Outperform rating despite the recent pullback. The firm points to TeraWulf’s contracted revenue foundation as the anchor: approximately $12.8 billion in long-term contracted revenue backed by Google credit-enhanced leases provides a level of cash flow visibility rare among bitcoin-adjacent names. With $3.27 billion in cash on the balance sheet following major financing rounds, the company has the capital to execute its build-out through 2026 and beyond.
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The pullback itself. A 22% decline from the February 52-week high represents a significant decline from recent highs as contracted HPC capacity comes online through 2026.
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HPC revenue acceleration. HPC lease revenue grew 35% quarter-over-quarter to $9.70 million in Q4 2025, and multiple construction milestones are scheduled for delivery across 2026, including CB-3 in mid-May, CB-4 in Q3, and CB-5 in Q4. Each delivery converts contracted capacity into recurring cash flow.
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Scale of the contracted platform. 522 critical IT MW of contracted HPC capacity and a 2.9 GW gross multi-regional platform underpin an estimated $815 million in average annualized NOI from the contracted platform, reflecting the scale of TeraWulf’s long-term NOI potential.


