TeraWulf reported a widening first-quarter loss for 2026, posting a net deficit of $427 million as revenue remained modest despite a notable swing into high-performance computing (HPC) capacity. The company’s top line for the quarter was $34 million, with HPC lease revenue accounting for $21 million—roughly 60% of total revenue and up 117% from the prior quarter. Bitcoin mining revenue came in at about $13 million, representing a 50% year-over-year decline.
The HPC segment was driven by 60 megawatts of active IT capacity at Lake Mariner, one of North America’s largest HPC campuses, leased to Core42. TeraWulf is coordinating capacity expansion with infrastructure partners Fluidstack and Google, with additional upgrades slated for delivery during 2026. The company closed the quarter with roughly $3.1 billion in cash, a liquidity position management stressed as essential for a growth path tied to long-term contracts.
Chief Financial Officer Patrick Fleury framed the results as a balance between disciplined growth and financial flexibility, noting the capital structure is designed to align long-term financing with contracted cash flows.
In October of the previous year, TeraWulf announced a landmark 25-year lease with Fluidstack, backed by Google, worth around $9.5 billion in contracted revenues. This expanded the company’s earlier 10-year commitment and signaled a deliberate pivot toward AI compute assets rather than conventional crypto mining alone. The developer intends to lay out a national network of power-advantaged sites to support scalable HPC and AI workloads, a move aimed at mitigating the volatility of BTC mining revenue.
Alongside the Lake Mariner operations, the company has been building out a broader infrastructure program, with plans for multiple sites designed to deliver reliable, power-rich capacity. The Abernathy joint venture remains a focal point, delivering 168 MW of HPC capacity under a 25-year lease and targeting delivery in Q4 2026. CEO Paul Prager framed the expansion as a differentiator in a market increasingly constrained by access to affordable energy, where long-term contracted power can stabilize returns for compute-heavy AI workloads.
TeraWulf’s approach mirrors a growing trend among crypto miners, where the economics of Bitcoin mining are increasingly complemented or even superseded by data-center operations and AI compute infrastructure. The company’s cash position—about $3.1 billion—offers a buffer as it deploys capital into capacity expansion while managing the uncertainties of crypto pricing and energy costs.
Riot Platforms, an adjacent name in the crypto infrastructure space, disclosed $167.2 million in revenue for the first quarter of 2026, with its newly launched data-center business contributing $33.2 million. Bitcoin mining revenue for Riot declined to $111.9 million from $142.9 million a year earlier, underscoring the sector-wide move toward diversified, more predictable revenue streams tied to AI compute and data-center services.
The broader market narrative aligns with a wave of miners reassessing strategy amid narrowing margins. Core Scientific, MARA Holdings, Hive, Hut 8 and Iren have all signaled moves to convert mining facilities into data centers or to acquire AI compute assets, aiming to harvest steadier demand from enterprise workloads and AI model training. In this evolving landscape, the ability to secure long-duration power contracts and stable revenue from non-mining compute could determine which players emerge as durable infrastructure providers in crypto and AI applications.
For readers watching the sector, the near-term watchpoints include progress on Abernathy’s delivery timetable and the pace at which Fluidstack/Google-backed capacity comes online, as well as how the AI compute demand environment evolves in relation to BTC price volatility and regulatory developments. The balance between crypto mining cycles and AI-oriented capacity will likely continue to shape margins and strategic choices across the ecosystem.
This article was originally published as TeraWulf Doubles AI Revenue as Mining Income Drops, $427M Loss on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.


