Bitcoin miner equity valuations used to move almost lockstep with the price of BTC. That story is now changing fast. According to a market note from CoinDesk , Compass Point analysts Michael Donovan and Ed Engel argue that AI compute contracts—not bitcoin mining economics—are becoming the primary valuation driver for publicly traded miners.
The analysts name Cipher Mining and TeraWulf as standout examples. Both stocks, they say, trade below the implied value of their signed AI hosting leases. Despite billions of dollars already locked into multi-year contracts, equity investors are applying a steep discount—a gap that the Compass Point team calls irrational.
The pivot toward AI infrastructure is not happening in isolation. Across the broader tech landscape, decentralized computing networks are attracting serious capital— partnerships like UXLINK and Origins Network show how scalable AI compute is being built on Web3 rails, while demand for AI data storage is turning projects like Filecoin into serious infrastructure plays. Bitcoin miners with low-cost power and industrial-scale cooling are well positioned to serve these clients, yet the market still prices them like pure-play crypto proxies.
Why the Contracts Are Being Ignored
One reason is inertia. Wall Street has spent years modeling miners as leveraged bitcoin bets. Analysts and traders still reflexively mark their positions when BTC moves 5%, ignoring the fact that a growing slice of revenue is now dollar-denominated and uncorrelated to crypto spot prices. At Cipher and TeraWulf, existing AI hosting agreements cover multiple years and carry creditworthy counterparties. Compass Point’s work suggests that summing the net present value of those contracts alone yields a figure well above the companies’ enterprise values.
The market is treating those leases as aspirational rather than binding, perhaps because many miners entered the AI space hastily, converting surplus capacity without a track record. Yet the commitments are legally enforceable and, in several cases, involve blue-chip technology tenants. If anything, the infrastructure bottlenecks facing AI labs mean that miners with ready-to-use data center space command stronger negotiating power than the equity market credits them for.
The repricing of miner stocks echoes a larger trend where traditional asset classes are bleeding into on-chain value— real-world asset tokenization just crossed $20 billion , and institutions are now pricing everything from treasury bills to compute power as tokenized contracts. Mining companies that can bridge that gap between physical energy and digital contracts sit at a structural inflection point.
What Remains Uncertain
Still, buying the miners on an AI thesis is not risk-free. Reconfiguring a bitcoin facility for high-density AI compute requires substantial capital upgrades—power distribution, networking, redundancy—and the execution has not been flawless across the sector. Permitting delays, equipment lead times, and the sheer complexity of operating in a 24/7 hyperscale environment separate the potential from the reality.
There is also the question of contract durability. AI demand is white-hot now, but if the hyperscaler capex cycle cools, extensions and escalators built into today’s leases could look less attractive. Compass Point assumes reasonable renewal probabilities, but the early-stage nature of the market means that even sophisticated models carry wide error bars. Investors will need to watch quarterly updates for conversion rates from signed intent to live revenue-generating racks.
For now, the disconnect between contract value and stock price is glaring. If the Compass Point analysis is even directionally correct, Cipher and TeraWulf represent mispriced optionality in a theme that is only just beginning to reshape the mining industry. The catalyst may not come from bitcoin’s next move, but from the next earnings call that proves AI cash flows are already here.