The bitcoin (BTC) mining sector is attracting a wave of investor interest following Core Scientific’s (CORZ) deal with artificial intelligence (AI) company CoreWeave, JPMorgan (JPM) said in a research report on Monday.
The bank notes that the total market cap of the 14 miners it tracks has grown by 22%, or $4 billion, since the announcement, versus a 7% drop for bitcoin and a 3% increase for the S&P 500 stock index. Core Scientific said it had signed a 200 megawatts (MW) artificial intelligence deal with the cloud computing firm earlier this month. News of the deal triggered a re-rating of the bitcoin mining sector as investors reacted positively to the announcement.
This is a reflection of the “alternative (and potentially more accretive) use cases for mining facilities and the scarcity and value of power access,” analysts Reginald Smith and Charles Pearce wrote, adding that the Core Scientific deal “validates and will accelerate miners diversifying into high performance computing (HPC) programs.”
Overweight-rated Iris Energy (IREN) is best positioned to take advantage of the opportunity, the report said, noting that the company has excess power capacity and is not wedded to bitcoin mining. Iris Energy was early to embrace the HPC trend and is already running graphics processing units (GPUs) at its facilities, the bank noted. The firm has a track record of building and delivering high-quality veri centers on time and has access to a decent amount of power.
Neutral-rated Cipher Mining (IFR) has attractive power costs and a strong operational history, but has a smaller power pipeline than Iris Energy, the bank said.
Riot Platforms (RIO), also overweight rated at JPMorgan, “remains fully committed to bitcoin mining,” and has not shown much interest in HPC despite its abundance of power capacity.
Underweight-rated Marathon Digital (MARA) and neutral-rated CleanSpark (CLSK) “screen the most expensive on an enterprise to energized power basis,” the report said.