Cipher Mining (CIFR) and TeraWulf (WULF) Get Morgan Stanley Nod; Marathon (MARA) Rated Underweight
Morgan Stanley has initiated coverage of bitcoin miners Cipher Mining and TeraWulf, assigning them Overweight ratings due to their potential as data center assets, while Marathon Digital received an Underweight rating. Cipher Mining's shares surged by 134% and TeraWulf's by 13% following the announcement, reflecting investor optimism about the future of these companies as stable cash flow generators. Morgan Stanley's analysis suggests a shift in how bitcoin mining operations are valued, emphasizing long-term infrastructure potential rather than direct bitcoin exposure.
Bitcoin Magazine Cipher Mining (CIFR) and TeraWulf (WULF) Get Morgan Stanley Nod; Marathon (MARA) Rated Underweight Morgan Stanley initiated coverage of three publicly traded bitcoin miners on Monday, assigning Overweight ratings to Cipher Mining (CIFR) and TeraWulf (WULF) while giving Marathon Digital (MARA) an Underweight rating. The move reflects the bank’s view that certain miners are better valued as infrastructure plays rather than pure crypto or bitcoin bets. Analyst Stephen Byrd and his team set price targets of $38 for Cipher and $37 for TeraWulf. Shares of CIFR rose roughly 134% to $16.50 on Monday, while WULF climbed 13% to $16.20. Marathon shares increased slightly to $8.28, below its $8 target. Morgan Stanley’s thesis focuses on the transformation of bitcoin mining sites into data center assets. Byrd argued that once a miner has built a data center and signed a long-term lease with a creditworthy counterparty, the asset should be valued for stable, long-term cash flow rather than bitcoin exposure. He likened these sites to data center real estate investment trusts (REITs) such as Equinix (EQIX) and Digital Realty (DLR), which trade at high multiples due to scale and predictable revenue. Cipher Mining sits at the center of that framework. Byrd described its facilities as suited to what he called a “REIT endgame,” where leased data centers function like toll roads, generating predictable cash flows with minimal reliance on bitcoin’s price. TeraWulf also fits the model, with a track record of signing data center agreements and management experience in power infrastructure. The firm plans to expand 250 megawatts of data center capacity per year through 2032, with Morgan Stanley modeling success rates of 50% in a base case and 75% in an optimistic scenario. Marathon Digital received a more cautious assessment. Byrd noted the company’s hybrid approach, combining bitcoin mining with data center ambitions, limits upside potential from bitcoin-to-data center ...
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