$1.6 billion. Gone. Not from a hack, not from a rug pull. From overleveraged traders betting against Bitcoin at exactly the wrong moment. That is the number you need to sit with before you read another word.
$1.6 billion. Gone. Not from a hack, not from a rug pull. From overleveraged traders betting against Bitcoin at exactly the wrong moment. That is the number you need to sit with before you read another word.
Bernstein published a research note this week that reframes two Bitcoin miners as something Wall Street has been struggling to name. The firm initiated coverage on TeraWulf and Cipher Digital with Outperform ratings and a label that might stick: "power landlords of AI."
Bernstein set price targets of $36 for TeraWulf and $32 for Cipher Digital, projecting aggregate AI revenue across its Bitcoin miner coverage to grow ninefold from $1.2 billion in 2026 to $10.7 billion by 2030.
The logic is simple. Hyperscalers want sites that are fast to deploy, and building a data center from scratch often takes years. Miners already own the land, grid connections, and substations. That is the landlord position. The asset was secured before the tenant market showed up.
TeraWulf holds a 3.8 gigawatt power portfolio built through brownfield site acquisitions. Bernstein projects AI revenue growing from $14 million in 2025 to $1.7 billion by 2030, with EBITDA margins reaching approximately 84%.
The company has contracted 643 gross megawatts to Fluidstack and Core42 under deals spanning 10 to 25 years, representing roughly $13 billion in total contracted revenue. Q1 2026 revenue came in at $34 million, with 60% already from HPC leases rather than Bitcoin mining. The pivot is not coming. It is already happening.
Cipher Digital carries an $11.4 billion order book backed 67% by hyperscalers. Its triple-net lease structure shifts operating costs entirely to tenants, producing margins above 99%.
That is not a mining company. That is a real estate play with a crypto origin story.
Bernstein is not the first. Morgan Stanley initiated Overweight coverage on both firms back in February 2026 with price targets between $37 and $38. Jefferies followed in May with Buy ratings. When Bernstein's note dropped, the market reaction was muted. Much of the AI pivot optimism was already priced in.
Bitcoin miners have signed 17 deals worth over $110 billion in the past two years, contracting 6 GW of power to AI hyperscalers. This is not a new story. It is a story Wall Street is finally telling with confidence.
Miners with long-term contracted AI revenue are less dependent on Bitcoin price cycles. That is structurally good for the network. Operators with diversified income are less likely to capitulate and sell BTC during downturns. Hash rate stays stable. The network stays secure.
As demand for AI computing accelerates, securing reliable electricity at scale has become as strategically important as the chips themselves. Every institutional desk covering AI infrastructure now has a reason to look at miners and by extension at Bitcoin.
The "power landlord" framing turns these firms into utilities with AI exposure. That is the bull case. The bear case is that the same framing will be used to justify equity raises. Build more capacity, sell the AI infrastructure story to new investors, dilute existing shareholders. The sector has run similar plays before under different labels.
Project financing markets are now covering 75 to 85% of construction costs for these facilities at interest rates well below what the underlying contracts generate, which limits immediate dilution risk but does not eliminate it.
The underlying assets are real. The execution risk is also real.
The Block — The power landlords of AI: Bernstein initiates coverage on TeraWulf and Cipher Digital
Decrypt — Bitcoin Miners Emerge as Power Landlords of AI Boom: Bernstein
Investing.com — Bernstein initiates TeraWulf stock with Outperform on AI growth
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