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TeraWulf - Q1 2024

May 13, 2024

Transcript

Operator (participant)

Greetings, and welcome to TeraWulf 2024 first quarter earnings call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Mr. Jason Assad, Director of Corporate Communications. Thank you, Mr. Assad. You may begin.

Jason Assad (Head of Investor Relations)

Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, and welcome to TeraWulf's first quarter earnings call. With me today are Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Paul Prager, Chief Operating Officer, Nazar Khan, and our Chief Financial Officer, Patrick Fleury. Before we get started, I'd like to remind everyone that our prepared remarks may contain forward-looking statements which are subject to risk and uncertainties, and we may make additional forward-looking statements during the question and answer session.

These forward-looking statements are subject to risk and uncertainties, and actual results may differ materially. When used in this call, the words anticipate, could, enable, estimate, intend, expect, believe, potential, will, should, project, and similar expressions as they relate to TeraWulf are such forward-looking statements. Investors are cautioned that forward-looking statements involve risk and uncertainties, which may, may cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated by TeraWulf at this time.

In addition, other risks are more fully described in TeraWulf's public filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, which may be viewed at sec.gov and in the investor section of our corporate website at terawulf.com. Finally, please note that on today's call, we'll refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures.

Please refer to our company's periodic reports on Form 10-K and 10-Q and on our website for a full reconciliation of these non-GAAP performance measures to the most comparable GAAP financial measures. I'd like to also inform investors of our new investor deck, which may be found at, also at terawulf.com. We'll begin today's call with prepared remarks from Paul, Nazar, and Patrick, then we'll proceed to Q&A. It's my pleasure to now turn the call over to TeraWulf's CEO, Paul Prager. Paul?

Paul Prager (CEO)

Thank you, Jason, and good afternoon, everyone. We appreciate your attendance today as we dive into our first quarter 2024 financial results. Just a couple of months ago, our last earnings call, we highlighted TeraWulf's significant growth and accomplishments throughout the fiscal year 2023. We experienced robust organic growth at existing sites, achieved substantial debt repayment, and bolstered liquidity.

These achievements underscore the strength of our foundation and set the stage for the growth we are excited to talk to you about today. For those unfamiliar with TeraWulf, we specialize in energy infrastructure, drawing from over three decades of experience.

Our primary focus presently centers on Bitcoin mining, where we employ sustainable practice utilizing zero carbon energy resources, while also contributing to grid stability. Operating from our two principal data centers, Lake Mariner in Upstate New York and Nautilus Cryptomine in Pennsylvania, a joint venture with Talen.

We take great pride in sourcing 95% of our power from clean energy sources. Our expansive mining facilities currently have a combined self-mining hash rate of 8 exahash per second. Powered by approximately 64,000 deployed miners with a fleet efficiency of 24.6 joules per terahash, we utilize 210 megawatts of infrastructure capacity.

Notably, our miners consistently operate at an impressive 98% of installed nameplate capacity. We're actively expanding our mining operations at Lake Mariner, with building 4 scheduled to be complete at the end of June and building 5 commencing construction. These expansions are projected to raise our total operational capacity to over 10 exahash per second by mid-year, with a fleet efficiency of 22.7 joules per terahash, and subsequently to more than 13 exahash per second, with a fleet efficiency of 20.9 joules per terahash.

We have one of the most efficient miner fleets in the industry. As Patrick will elaborate, we finalized a new miner purchase and option agreement with Bitmain for S21s and S21 Pros, solidifying our growth trajectory. This contract not only ensures the prompt delivery of machines to occupy building four, but also secures favorable pricing for up to 6 exahash of potential future deliveries.

Looking forward, our plan is to achieve a 300 MW infrastructure capacity by year-end 2024, with the goal to further expand to 600 MW of deployed infrastructure in 2025. As an energy infrastructure business, we are committed to ongoing development and identifying optimal applications for our megawatts, whether it's Bitcoin mining or high computing endeavors. The significance of owning infrastructure and scalability cannot be overstated.

Our optionality extends well beyond that of our peers, thanks to our energy background and existing digital infrastructure. In fact, I believe no miner is better positioned than TeraWulf when it comes to owning scalable, low-cost, and zero-carbon energy infrastructure assets. Over the last nine months, Wulf Den, our internal innovation hub, has been focused on researching, developing, and deploying our extensive and scalable digital infrastructure.

Following a successful pilot phase involving a compact NVIDIA GPU system, we allocated a 2-megawatt power block at our Lake Mariner facility, which could support over 1,000 H100 GPUs as part of a broader high-performance computing initiative aimed at diversifying our revenue streams. TeraWulf's large-scale energy infrastructure, coupled with access to zero-carbon, low-cost power, is invaluable for meeting the growing demand from Bitcoin mining and AI applications.

Our sites fulfill demanding specifications of hyperscalers, offering direct access to extensive contiguous land suitable for constructing data centers, as well as access to abundant water for cooling and adherence to a sustainable ESG framework. In a few moments, Nazar will provide more detail how we are strategically and carefully approaching the AI HPC opportunity.

The immense value of our available, scalable, and sustainable energy infrastructure is undeniable, as demonstrated in recent research reports from both Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs. We believe the market isn't properly attributing the inherent and significant value of our owned infrastructure in our current market valuation. Turning to our financial position, we remain steadfast in leveraging our resilient, low-cost infrastructure to maximize profits, repay debt, and return value to shareholders. Our performance in the first quarter highlights TeraWulf's consistent achievement of industry-leading profitability.

We delivered a GAAP gross margin of 66%, which increased to 71% inclusive of Nautilus and non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA of $32 million, which translates to an EBITDA per Exahash of approximately $4,100, among the highest of our public peers. Additionally, our quarterly SG&A of $8 million and stock-based comp of $7 million are far below all of our peers. Why are these statistics important for management and shareholders to consider?

Because they highlight TeraWulf's competitive advantages versus all other public Bitcoin miners. One, low cost, zero-carbon power. Two, profitability. We generate more EBITDA per Exahash than our larger public peers, and therefore require less capital and future growth to achieve the same level of profitability as our peers. And three, efficiency. Our team is lean, mean, and we manage TeraWulf to achieve maximum profitability for our shareholders. We are not a lifestyle company for management.

We estimate our cost to mine a Bitcoin at approximately $40,000 per Bitcoin post-halving, utilizing a network hash rate of 600 exahash, positioning us as one of the lowest cost producers in the industry. Looking forward, we remain squarely focused on capital efficiency, ensuring that every dollar we spend on CapEx creates shareholder value. This approach underscores our commitment to maximizing returns and driving long-term sustainability in our business.

Before I conclude my remarks today, I want to underscore the significance of capital efficiency within our strategic framework. At Wulf, we firmly believe that our success hinges not merely on the speed of our expansion, but on the discerning allocation of capital to generate sustained returns for our shareholders. So what precisely do I mean by capital efficiency?

I'm referring to the prudent utilization of funds, whether derived from free cash flow, debt, or equity, to operate and expand with a keen focus on the relationship between capital deployed and the resulting returns. This distinction is crucial. It enables investors to differentiate between the companies that are growing profitably versus simply growing. At TeraWulf, we firmly believe that not all exahash is created equal.

Guess what? The same is true for dilution. As we have demonstrated quarter after quarter, our approach is one of prudence, ensuring minimal dilution to maintain alignment with our stakeholders. Remember, this management team, including yours truly, is among the largest shareholders, which underscores our entire alignment with you, the investor. Beyond the exhaustive analysis and modeling, what truly defines our strategy is capital efficiency.

You should rest assured that when we decide to utilize the ATM, it is with the absolute, undeniable conviction that every dollar invested will yield a substantial return. It is clear that some of our competitors aren't focused on profitability when announcing expansion plans, and that is what differentiates TeraWulf. Capital efficiency serves as the cornerstone of our decision-making process, guiding us to make investments that not only fuel growth, but also ensure that every dollar spent generates substantial long-term value.

This disciplined approach empowers us to maintain a lean and adaptable business model, while seizing opportunities that align with our core objective of delivering sustainable growth and returning value to our shareholders. It is also why TeraWulf delivers more profitability with less dilution than any of our peers.

Now I'll hand the call over to my partner and friend, Nazar Khan, to elaborate on Wulf Compute's initiatives before our CFO, Patrick Fleury, provides a detailed review of our financial results for the first quarter.

Nazar Khan (Co-Founder and CTO)

Thank you, Paul, and good afternoon, everyone. Before delving into the latest developments at Wulf Compute, I'd like to provide some context regarding the surging demand for energy infrastructure. As Paul mentioned, our expertise lies in the power generation sector. Over the past two decades, we've been involved in the development, construction, financing, ownership, and operation of power generation facilities, both domestically in the United States and in various overseas jurisdictions.

Central to our operations has been our keen understanding of power flows, a skill that's particularly pertinent in today's landscape. With the advent of high-demand loads, such as HPC and AI, ensuring timely access to sufficient power has become a critical concern. However, access to power and energy infrastructure remains a significant constraint. These high-density compute loads have two primary objectives.

First, to secure access to power at scale, and second, to do so within the next 12-24 months. Once these primary objectives are met, considerations then shift to securing low-cost and zero-carbon power solutions. Fortunately, the TeraWulf portfolio boasts substantial capacity to fulfill each of these objectives. As high-density compute loads gravitate towards areas with ample power resources, we're actively engaging with various counterparties to allocate our energy infrastructure accordingly.

We are in the early stages of this transition and are thoughtfully analyzing the alternatives. Over the past 9 months, Wolf Compute has been dedicated to developing the blueprint for our low-cost, zero-carbon, and scalable digital infrastructure. Traditional data centers are facing challenges in meeting the escalating rack density requirements of current and next-generation GPUs.

To address this, our engineering team has collaborated closely with industry leaders, such as NVIDIA, to design air-cooled and liquid-cooled facilities tailored to meet these demands. The culmination of these efforts is the construction of our 2-MW facility at the Lake Mariner site, slated for completion by early August. We're currently in discussions with several counterparties regarding the utilization of this capacity.

Our core expertise at TeraWulf lies in energy infrastructure, and our primary objective remains to expand our facilities to meet the increasing energy demands of the rapidly growing high-density compute market. Following our initial 2-MW project, we're now in the final stages of designing a 10-MW facility engineered to be easily scalable.

As you'll see in our most recent investor presentation, we've summarized various strategies for extracting value from our infrastructure as it relates to AI and HPC applications. Each strategy entails distinct capital, operational, and margin considerations.

Given our dedication to energy infrastructure and our belief in being at the forefront of the growing demand for it, our current focus is on the co-location, white space, and rack-ready model. This approach strikes a balance between long-term ownership of energy infrastructure and the potential for increased revenue per megawatt over time in the most capital-efficient manner.

We expect the supply of scaled, low-cost, zero-carbon energy infrastructure to become more constrained over the next year. Hyperscalers are aggressively acquiring or optioning energy infrastructure that they plan to grow into over the next few years. We believe the path to creating highest shareholder value is by designing and building next-generation data center infrastructure that we offer into the market. Looking forward, we envision an opportunity to expand our high-density compute business to 100 MW within the next few years.

This expansion will leverage our existing assets and may involve acquiring additional sites to bolster our capacity further. Now, I'll hand the call over to our CFO, Patrick Fleury, to provide a detailed review of our financial results for the first quarter.

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

Thank you, Nazar. As Paul stated, our first quarter was strong across all financial metrics, driven by favorable business fundamentals and outstanding execution. In the first quarter of 2024, we self-mined 767 Bitcoin at Lake Mariner, and our net share of mined Bitcoin at Nautilus was 284, for a total of 1,051 Bitcoin, or about 11.5 Bitcoin per day, a 10% increase over the 959 Bitcoin mined in 4Q 2023.

We received an additional 6 Bitcoin in 1Q 2024 and 13 Bitcoin in 4Q 2023 from profit sharing associated with a hosting agreement at Lake Mariner that expired in February 2024. Our GAAP revenue saw outstanding growth of 82% quarter-over-quarter, reaching $42.4 million in 1Q 2024 from $23.3 million in 4Q 2023.

Our value per Bitcoin self-mined this quarter, a non-GAAP metric that includes Bitcoin mined at Nautilus, averaged $53,750 per Bitcoin, for a total of $56.8 million, as detailed and defined in our monthly operating reports and press releases. As a reminder, there is a key difference between our GAAP financials and the monthly operating reports and 2024 guidance.

Due to our 25% ownership in Nautilus, the revenue, cost of revenue, operating expenses, depreciation, and amortization at Nautilus are not consolidated into our GAAP financial statements. Instead, the financial impact of the Nautilus joint venture is reflected in the equity and net income, or loss of investee, net of tax line item on the GAAP income statement.

Our GAAP cost of revenue, exclusive of depreciation, for 1Q24, was $14.4 million, a 61% increase over $8.9 million in 4Q23. The quarter-over-quarter increase was principally due to a 37% increase in average operating exahash, in addition to higher realized power costs at Lake Mariner in 1Q24.

Looking now at our gross profit, also exclusive of depreciation, we saw an increase of 95% quarter-over-quarter, from $14.4 million in 4Q23 to $28 million in 1Q24. Our total power cost per Bitcoin mined, a non-GAAP metric that includes Bitcoin mined at Nautilus, was $15,501 in 1Q24, compared to $10,308 in 4Q23.

As a reminder, in our GAAP financials, unlike our monthly operating reports, the company records proceeds received and to be received for demand response programs as a reduction in cost of revenue. These expected proceeds totaled $1.2 million in 1Q24 and $1 million in 4Q23. As disclosed in our 2024 guidance, we expect to achieve an average power cost, including demand response revenues and the impact of Nautilus's $0.02 power, of $0.035 per kWh in 2024.

For 1Q24, we achieved an average power cost of $0.041 per kWh. Operating expenses were stable quarter-over-quarter at $1.7 million in 1Q24 and 4Q23. As disclosed in our 2024 guidance, we expect $13.5 million of operating expenses in 2024, which includes operating expenses at Nautilus.

Of the 13.5 total, approximately 50% is expected to be incurred at Lake Mariner and 50% at Nautilus. SG&A expenses increased quarter-over-quarter from $8.8 million in 4Q23 to $14.9 million in 1Q24. However, the increase is almost entirely due to $6.2 million of stock-based compensation expense incurred in 1Q24.

Adjusting for stock-based comp, SG&A decreased 6% year-over-year from $8.5 million in 1Q23 to $7.9 million in 1Q24. SG&A spend is more heavily weighted to the first quarter of the year versus following quarters, and as disclosed in our 2024 guidance, we continue to anticipate approximately $27.5 million of SG&A in 2024.

Depreciation increased quarter-over-quarter from $8.3 million in 4Q23 to $15.1 million in 1Q24, which was the result of an increase in mining capacity and infrastructure placed into service, as well as $3.8 million of accelerated depreciation related to certain miners, of which the company shortened their estimated useful lives based on expected replacement by April 30, 2024.

Gain on fair value of digital currency, net of $1.3 million in first quarter 2024, is a new line item for us, given our early adoption of the new FASB accounting rule, which marks the company's Bitcoin holdings to the fair market value as of the filing date, with changes in fair value recorded in net income.

It is critically important to note this $1.3 million is substantially all realized gain, meaning it is realized cash in our bank account and not theoretical mark-to-market gains on paper, which many of our peers that HODL have reported. I am amused watching our public peers report, quote, Adjusted EBITDA, unquote, inclusive of theoretical mark-to-market gains on BTC HODL balances, as Adjusted EBITDA is supposed to help an investor determine normalized cash flow generation for a business.

It will be telling to see if our peers stick to this methodology, if and when BTC price drops quarter-over-quarter, as it's done thus far in 2Q24. I won't be holding my breath for the self-declared industry leaders to do the right thing.

GAAP interest expense in first quarter 2024 and 4Q23 was $11 million and $9.3 million, respectively, which includes cash interest expense and amortization of debt issuance costs and debt discount related to the term loan financing. However, cash interest paid during 1Q24 was $3.7 million, down over 8% from $4.1 million in 4Q23. This decrease is the result of repayment of $33.4 million of debt in 1Q24.

This trend will continue in 2Q24 as we've repaid a further $30.1 million of debt in early April. In total, the company has reduced its debt balance by over $70 million since the start of 4Q23, with $51.5 million of free cash flow from operations and only $18.6 million of equity proceeds....

In connection with the voluntary prepayment of $18.6 million of debt in 1Q 2024, the company incurred prepayment fees of $0.3 million, recognized unamortized discount of $1.7 million associated with the principal repaid, and recorded a loss on extinguishment of debt for a total of $2 million. In 1Q 2024, we reported $5.3 million in equity and net income of investee, net of tax, as compared to $3.3 million in 4Q 2023.

These amounts represent TeraWulf's proportional share of net income of the Nautilus joint venture. Our GAAP net loss for the first quarter was $9.9 million, compared to a net loss of $10.8 million in 4Q 2023. Our non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA for 1Q 2024 was $32 million, a 95% improvement over $16.4 million in 4Q 2023.

Turning our attention to the balance sheet. As of March 31, we held $45.8 million in cash, with total assets amounting to $395 million, and total liabilities of $123 million. As we move through 2024, we anticipate a consistent and rapid reduction in our long-term debt, with an estimated $15 million-$20 million repayment the first week of July.

Our net working capital, excluding the current portion of long-term debt, held steady quarter-over-quarter at positive $31 million. As disclosed in our updated investor deck and 2024 guidance slide, we achieved a marginal cost of production, including every single cost in the company, of approximately $29,000 in 1Q 2024, and expect to achieve approximately $40,000 in 2Q and the second half of 2024.

1Q 2024 realized cost per BTC was higher than our expected $25,000 due to seasonally higher realized power costs of 4.1 cents/kWh versus our projected 3.5 cents/kWh annual average, and seasonally higher 1Q 2024 SG&A expense due to annual filings, audits, and related legal fees.

Lastly, in March 2024, the company entered into a miner purchase and option agreement with Bitmain to lock in pricing of approximately $16 per terahash on an additional 7 exahash of S21 and S21 Pro miners. The company has paid $17.5 million for 5,000 S21 miners, which we expect on-site at Lake Mariner by the end of May, and funded a further $9.6 million deposit for an additional 30,000 miners.

At Wulf, our financial objectives remain clear and simple: maximize profits, repay debt, and return value to shareholders while providing investors access through transparency and accountability. With that, I'll pass it back to Paul and look forward to answering your questions.

Paul Prager (CEO)

Thank you once again for joining us today. In summary, TeraWulf stands at the forefront of the industry with its best-in-class assets, lowest unit economics, and unparalleled ability to scale our owned infrastructure. We remain deeply committed to delivering consistent growth and profitability while aligning closely with the interests of our investors. As we look ahead, we believe our infrastructure of strategic importance is currently undervalued by the market.

The foundation we've laid and the trajectory we're on underscore our potential for continued success. We appreciate your continued support and confidence in TeraWulf. Together, we are poised to capitalize on the exciting opportunities ahead, uphold our position as a leader in capital efficiency, and deliver sustained value to our shareholders.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your questions from the queue.

For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment please. We'll poll for questions. The first question comes from the line of Josh Siegler with Cantor Fitzgerald. Please go ahead.

Josh Siegler (Principal)

Yeah. Hi, guys. Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question today. Just want to start by saying I really appreciate the breakdown of your unit costs here. It's very helpful for us investors. For my first question, I was wondering, you know, now that we have passed the halving, you've demonstrated this profitability now, do you expect more financing channels to really open up, maybe perhaps debt markets, once you've proven that profitability post-halving? Thanks.

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

Yeah. Hey, Josh, this is Patrick. Can you hear me okay?

Josh Siegler (Principal)

Yes, yeah.

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

Okay. I'll take that as a yes. Yeah, look, it's a great question. I think we've talked about this before. You know, I'd like to see the debt markets kinda from a corporate level, so not the old miner finance model, because that obviously didn't work very well.

But, you know, from a corporate level debt perspective, as the business gets more mature and candidly post-halving, you know, there's a separation of companies that are profitable and those that are not, that are really, you know, set up more as lifestyle companies, as Paul mentioned, for management teams. Yeah, I think, you know, I'd like to see the debt markets reopen, and you'll see in a slide that we put in our slide deck, I think it's page 12, but, you know, we just are providing a bridge of-...

capital needs for the year, and we have assumed that we just take all of our free cash flow and pay down our debt. You know, I do think there's a possibility. I've already received a bunch of inbounds, and certainly, given our business and the collateral that we put in the ground has grown over time, and the debt has been reduced.

Yeah, I think there'll be opportunities to kinda term that debt out, so it really will become a question of whether we want to keep it or not. But I think for us, as we pivot a bit more into the high-power compute and AI space, you know, that space, the public companies trade at 20-25x EBITDA, and they all have, you know, 6x leverage 'cause you've got long-term contracts, and it's a much more stable revenue business.

So, you know, I could see us, as we kinda get into that, really have two kind of silos. One, the Bitcoin mining business, two, you know, the compute business, and those are very different financing beasts. So yeah, I'll just leave it at that.

Josh Siegler (Principal)

Yeah, understood. That makes sense. You know, following up on that, I did wanna ask a little bit more about the HPC side of things for my second question. Most notably, you know, last we talked about high-performance compute was a couple of months ago, and in your deck, you outlined, you know, the three potential business models that you could pursue, and you have the pilot program in works here.

I was just wondering, you know, now that time has passed, if you're becoming more comfortable with one specific model over another in terms of, you know, what the future of HPC may look like for TeraWulf.

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

Yeah, sure. Go ahead, Nazar.

Nazar Khan (Co-Founder and CTO)

Hey, Josh. It's Nazar here. Yeah, I think as we've noted, our core expertise is really around energy infrastructure, and so we are getting more comfortable, and we've been working to design, you know, the next generation data center. Given where GPU rack density is going, a lot of the legacy data centers may not be able to most efficiently meet the power needs.

And so we think from a delivering infrastructure that can be used for not just H100s, but even kind of Blackwells and beyond, we're designing digital infrastructure that can meet those needs. So we're getting very comfortable that we can design, put up, and operate that physical infrastructure.

So kind of in that, if you look at page, I think it's page 14 in our deck, that middle column really kind of we think is a sweet spot between owning the infrastructure, bringing in customers who may pay for the GPUs, and having kind of a long-term ownership around that. Now, that being said, you know, this is kind of the full spectrum of the alternatives that are out there.

And as we get further along into it, you know, post our 2-MW pilot, you know, we're finalizing the design for a 10-MW facility. If we see an opportunity, you know, Patrick just mentioned, you know, around financing or other things, to be able to facilitate kind of participating in more of the chain, we'll do so. But, you know, currently, we're really focused kind of on that middle column, and that's where we think, you know, our expertise lies. I don't know, Patrick, if you had anything to add to that.

Paul Prager (CEO)

Yeah, this is Paul. Hey, Josh. The only thing I'd want to add is a little bit unique to Wolf, which is our sites. You know, not, not everyone has the energy infrastructure for that kind of scale in terms of power. Not everybody has the water permits for that kind of volume of water, and all the access to the contiguous land that one of these massive data centers want. That makes it exciting, but again, they're all out shopping for this stuff, which just means that the energy infrastructure value is gonna continue to head north.

I think Nazar said the other day on one of our calls, "You know, we're not looking for a trade, we're looking to build a business." So in that regard, I think, our inclination is to focus on that middle column, because I think it's just, it's about returning maximum value to the shareholder, as opposed to sort of having us work for, you know, Meta, Amazon, or one of those guys.

And so, that's how we're currently thinking about it, but these are early days, Josh, and I don't think one needs to sort of, make a commitment at this point, as much as one needs to really study this market and, and understand it. That said, it's also very important to us that we remain mining Bitcoin. We're really good at it.

I think we're best in class at it, and we believe in Bitcoin. So I think what Patrick said earlier, which is we see ourselves as possibly having at least a couple of buckets out there, one HPC and one mining Bitcoin. I think you'll continue to see that as a driver of our business philosophy.

Josh Siegler (Principal)

Yeah, understood in that regard. Congrats on the great results here, guys, and looking forward to the future. Thanks.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Lucas Pipes with B. Riley Securities. Please go ahead.

Lucas Pipes (Senior Analyst)

Thank you very much, operator. Good afternoon, everybody. Patrick, I guess I'll have to look up that industry classification system, but, in more serious matters, we are hearing a lot about, you know, the tightness in the power markets with the AI growth. And, Paul, you know power markets extremely well. So I wonder.

I wanted to hear your opinion on that. Is that true? Do you see that tightness in the power markets? And then, if it is true, who gets that economic rent? Is it the utility? Is it anyone with a PPA? And, to what extent does geography matter in all of this? Appreciate your thoughts on this. Thank you.

Paul Prager (CEO)

... Naz, do you want to start with respect to HPC, and I'll follow?

Nazar Khan (Co-Founder and CTO)

Sure. Hey, Lucas, it's Nazar here. So as we look at the landscape, you know, there's a mismatch. You know, the size of the demand and the time frame for which supply is available. So, you know, with infrastructure, if you have enough time and enough money, things can be solved.

And right now, we're at a point in time where the near-term demand outstrips the available supply. And that's particularly the case if you want scaled access to power at a low cost, and it comes from a zero carbon source. You know, there's not that many places where you can find all of those variables available to you.

And so as we think about it, you know, kind of the owner of that infrastructure or the owner of that right to procure or use that power should be able to capture the rent. And so what we see happening right now is, if you look at kind of at one end of the spectrum, the hyperscalers are flush with cash, and they're out there optioning up as many of these sites as they can, you know?

And whether they ultimately use the capacity or not, that's not their concern for today. You know, they'll worry about that tomorrow. But in the near term, they're just optioning it all up. And so, again, from our perspective, we've got, you know, 300 megawatts of incremental available capacity yet to be developed.

We think fundamentally, we're sitting at the constraint point, where, again, there's not enough supply to meet the demand. And so we should be positioned to capture a fair amount of that rent. And how we do so, and I think, you know, that those business models are still evolving. And so the other thing that we're seeing is the traditional model for how data centers operated. You know, they went into a territory, they called up Dominion, said, "We need 40 megawatts." Dominion said, "We'll serve you." That, you know, may occur.

You know, we think that will occur, will still occur, but we're also seeing, you know, the demand sources going directly to procuring that supply for themselves, and whether it's Microsoft's announcement with Brookfield saying, you know, "Build out 10.5 gigs of capacity for us," or, you know, what Amazon did at the Talen site. And so again, those places where you have access to that power, and you can deliver that, and we do think that those will be best positioned to kind of capture the value that's coming from that demand.

Paul Prager (CEO)

The only thing that I would add to it is, you know, I look at there being some competition then to a Bitcoin miner, because he's got to compete with a whole different level of giants in these hyperscalers for sites with power, and not all sites are created equal. Likewise, I think, you know, Patrick mentioned earlier today, you know, he said, "If you've got a good business model but bad power, well, you're screwed.

You're hosed." Because at the end of the day, you have bad power contract, it's bad power contract. You'll never rightsize your costs. And so we have good power. We have good location, but green power, but good power in that it's really inexpensive.

I think, you know, you have to look at some of the shops in Bitcoin mining that really have great power agreements and are transparent, by the way, about them. And that's where you ought to be making your bet.

Lucas Pipes (Senior Analyst)

That's very helpful. Really appreciate the color, and that provides a lot of context. Quick second question. Just in terms of that $9.6 million towards an additional 30,000 miners, how should we think about kind of that by itself from a timing perspective, and then kind of longer term, or rather, beyond that, where's your head as it relates to growth? Appreciate your thoughts. Thank you.

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

Yeah, sure. So Lucas, I think that whole contract, right, is for 7 exahash total. You know, 5,000 of that, we pointed out in the call, has been paid for and will be delivered at the end of this month. And then really, I think as you...

You know, we haven't committed beyond what you see on page 12 of our deck, and perhaps Nazar can speak to this, but I'll just mention it because, you know, part of it is we think that model is changing. I mean, even over the past few weeks, we've gotten some calls from folks that, you know, are discussing concepts like giving the miners to us for free with a profit share.

And so, you know, I think we're hesitant to kind of commit to anything beyond what we've kind of laid out. You know, we'll have 13 exahash of infrastructure ready to rock and roll this year. We'll be at 10 exahash by July first. So that's, you know, I realize, Lucas, that's not as specific as I typically like to be, but there's a lot of movement in that market, so that's kind of how we think about it. I don't know, Nazar or Paul, if you want to add anything there.

Nazar Khan (Co-Founder and CTO)

Yeah, just add to that, Lucas, you know, the contract is for 25,000 remaining machines at $16 per terahash, and that $9.6 million represents a 10% deposit on those machines. And so as Patrick said, that we've, in that contract, we've effectively taken down 10,000 of those machines to cover the build before, which will come online here, as Patrick said, by July first, and then the remaining miners are on option available to us.

And, you know, for us, it's really about capital efficiency. So as we are thinking about continuing to grow the business and allocating the infrastructure most effectively, that capital kind of question comes in.

As Patrick said, you know, we're looking at a number of different ways to skin that cat, you know, and it ranges from, you know, purchasing more miners at $16 a terahash … some sort of profit share and even, you know, kind of something in between, which would just be, you know, effectively being able to replace hash boards and machines.

So you're significantly limiting your capital costs by using kind of the existing, you know, box that exists for the miner and swapping out hash boards with the next generation of hash boards. So there's a whole spectrum of things that we're actively looking at in terms of how we will populate, you know, those next buildings that are coming up.

Lucas Pipes (Senior Analyst)

Thank you. And is the deposit transferable? So if you chose to go forward with another option, how should we think about the deposit?

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

No, I mean, the deposits for those, those machines, Lucas, so, you know, we'll either. But as you know, that deposit kind of works down every time we take a delivery of machines ratably.

Lucas Pipes (Senior Analyst)

Yeah. Mm-hmm.

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

Right? So, yeah. Yep. So the deposit's down to secure the price and the future delivery, and then we'll kind of work that down over time as we take machines.

Lucas Pipes (Senior Analyst)

Got it. All right. Well, I appreciate the color and, you know, continued best of luck.

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

Thanks, Lucas.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Joe Flynn with Compass Point Research and Trading. Please go ahead.

Joe Flynn (Managing Director, Equity Research)

Guys, I had a question related to the, you know, Nautilus option to expand 15 MW. Do the terms of that option change at all with, you know, the Amazon acquisition, or does it require, like, a sign-off? And then ultimately, how should we think about, you know, timing of getting that capacity online if there's no change? Thanks.

Nazar Khan (Co-Founder and CTO)

Sure. The Amazon is a new landlord, so the agreement we have is the agreement we have, so there's no change in the terms and conditions of the agreement. We are currently working to finalize the designs for that facility.

We're targeting a 2025 online date for that. You know, currently we're focused on completing building four, and we've got a pretty quick turn on delivering building five at Lake Mariner, and so we've slated the Nautilus expansion for 2025. And so we are working, you know, with the landlord there to finalize the design for the building that we put at that site.

Joe Flynn (Managing Director, Equity Research)

Great. And Patrick, you kind of touched on this already, but I guess in this the low-cost hash price environment, you know, how should we prioritize like, you know, between, you know, paying down debt and CapEx, you know, there are opportunities to push some CapEx out, you know, if needed, for the flexibility. Thanks.

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

Yeah, sure. I mean, I think what we try to be, again, our philosophy, as everyone knows on this call, is being highly transparent, which many of our peers purposely do not. And so we are, we are going the other route. So on page 12, we've literally laid out everything that we, the management team, has committed to for this year. And so you can see on that slide, you know, we've got around $45-$50 million left to raise over the next 6-7 months.

So that, just to put into context, and the reason why we put slide 11 in our deck, is that absolutely pales in comparison to even if, even, again, even if we just did equity for that $45-$50 million that we're talking about, and we used all of our free cash flow generated during this year to pay off the debt, it's just page 11 puts it in context for you.

I mean, some of our peers issued over $500 million on the ATM in the first 4 months of the year, okay? And not only that, but they generated virtually no profit. I mean, two of our largest peers generated close to $10 million and $50 million, being close to 50% and 150% larger than our company, and we generated $32 million of EBITDA.

And so I think we are happy to own and commit to what is on page 12 here because we are massively and accretively growing the business using equity as an eyedropper. These other companies on this page 11 use equity with a fire hose. And so not only that, but, you know...

And by the way, my hats off, you'll see on the top of this page, CleanSpark is highly profitable. So using your ATM to fund highly profitable growth, I will applaud that all day. But when you're using your ATM to fund a HODL strategy, where only management benefits by paying themselves more if the price of Bitcoin goes up, you know, that's why we put the quote on the top of the page. Read it.

Revenue is vanity, profit is sanity, but cash is king." Bunch of our peers are focused, and they'll go out and tout to you guys how much exahash they're putting in the ground and how big their revenue is. Well, guess what? It doesn't matter. Every single business that I've ever invested in, or most investors on this phone, right, even Uber, at some point, Uber has to be profitable for people to stay invested. So I think you have to see some of these companies show you guys a profit.

I think now that we're into the halving, you know, some of the peers are telling you their hash cost, which we also put out in crystal clear numbers on page 13, both actual realized in first quarter and what we expect in 2Q and the second half, it's all right there for you guys to see. Bunch of our peers are asked recently, "What's your cost to produce a Bitcoin?"

They won't even answer. I don't know how you stay invested in a company like that. So we are bucking that trend and trying to give you all the tools you need to see that we are a profitable company that prudently accesses the capital markets when we need to, to grow.

Joe Flynn (Managing Director, Equity Research)

Understood. Thanks for the call.

Operator (participant)

... Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Mike Grondahl with Northland Securities. Please go ahead.

Mike Grondahl (Director and Senior Research Analyst)

Hey, thanks, guys. Kind of referring to slide 14, Wolf Compute or the HPC opportunity. Now you're kind of focused on that center column. Paul, are you thinking of this as a business, $10s of millions or $100s of millions? And then maybe as a follow-up, what do you think this business will look like in 3-5 years?

Paul Prager (CEO)

So Naz, why don't you start, and then I'll come in and give my thoughts on where we're headed? Because-

Nazar Khan (Co-Founder and CTO)

Sure. Mike, we think we can grow this business to hundreds of megawatts. So our 2-MW pilot and the 10-MW building that we're designing is more geared towards an engineering exercise to ensure that the product that we have available meets all of the specifications and demands of people that will use that infrastructure, not just today, but again, you know, future-proofing a bit for at least the next couple iterations of GPUs that may come out.

So as we believe, again, the availability of power at scale, at low cost and zero-carbon is tight, and so we, you know, firmly believe that over time, this is a business that we could build into, you know, 100 MW plus, right? With the 300 MW we have today, then we think we could, you know, build that up.

We are also looking at a number of other sites as well, which could further add to the capacity to build that business out. So again, we think it's we're trying to build a business here, that's really focused in on that.

As we kind of, you know, fast forward, you know, 2, 3, 4 years from today, again, you know, this page also, you know, lays out somewhat of the how we see the marketplace playing out. You have your hyperscalers again, who have the capital and the ability to throw down a lot of cash and try to control their own destiny. And so you see them doing that in a number of different places.

Again, I gave the example earlier of Microsoft and Brookfield, the 10.5 gigawatts of power that will feed directly into to Microsoft's needs. And so there's only, you know, a few names in the world that can afford to do that, and they're gonna do that. At the other end of the spectrum, you have, you know, kind of the newer AI companies developing.

One or two or three of them will likely, you know, grow from where they are today to becoming something fairly significant, and you have enterprise customers in between. And so we really believe that, you know, for other than kind of the Hyperscalers, the availability of what we can offer is gonna be tightly limited, and we're going to be a natural and complementary customer or a partner for them. So that's where we're positioning ourselves, and we do think that over time, this can become a real business.

Paul Prager (CEO)

Yeah, and thanks, Nas. What I'd like to add is a couple of things. One is, you know, B.B. King has a great song. He used to sing it. So "Don't Make Your Move Too Soon." You know, these are very early days in the HPC—in the high-performance compute business.

And I think it would be prudent for us to really look at all the ways that we could take advantage of our megawatts, of our energy infrastructure, because that's really our advantage, right? The sites, the water permit, but it's the access to low-cost, carbon-free energy that is what is so enabling on a long-term basis to building a business at Wolf Den.

So I think that is why we're focused on that center column right now, because that's where we think it's likely to see the best value for Wolf shareholders. That said, we're constantly. I mean, this is all we talk about every minute of the day, trying to figure out how do we get the most to our shareholders out of our energy infrastructure. I think on a long-term basis, you would see Wolf having, you know, two divisions, if you will: high-speed compute and Bitcoin mining. We like Bitcoin mining. We're very constructive on the price of Bitcoin.

We are the most efficient at it, and we don't think it would be prudent to just sort of switch gears and become a high-speed compute company, particularly at this point in time, there's so much to learn. We think the right thing to do is to sort of continue our analysis, focus on the center column, do what we're doing in terms of the 2 and then the 10 MW, and then, you know, continue to be dedicated to Bitcoin mining at the lowest possible cost. And so that's where I think we're headed.

I think that will also avail us additional opportunities in terms of our cap structure, because I think that, again, the high-speed computing space, much more, it's much kinder on an institutional level to a business, and when you think about lending and the kind of terms that are available to you. So I think that's where we'll end up.

Mike Grondahl (Director and Senior Research Analyst)

Got it. And then one follow-up. I'm trying to connect slide 12. One of the uses of the $47 million in capital is Wolf Den, and it says $5 million. How does that blend into slide 14 in the financing line for the middle column? You know, it says equity initially. Can you just kinda speak to the financing and what equity initially means in that center column, and how far $5 million goes?

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

... Yeah. Naz, you want to take that first part, and then I'll take the second on the five?

Nazar Khan (Co-Founder and CTO)

Sure. The 2-megawatt pilot that we're building is largely most of that $5 million budget. So that's the full design, engineering, construction cost associated with that 2-megawatt pilot. That 2 megawatts of capacity will be available in early August, and we're in discussions with a number of different counterparties around utilizing that capacity.

So that's where the bulk of that goes. And that budget also includes the engineering and design work for the 10-megawatt building as well. And, again, that 10-megawatt building is designed to be scalable, and so whether we build 10 megawatts or 20 megawatts or 30 megawatts, it's really just scaling up that design. And so that's what's included in that budget there for toward the compute business.

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

Yeah. And then, Mike, to answer your question, so I think it's helpful to distinguish between perhaps the build to suit, which is the right column, and then the co-location, which is the middle column. So in the build to suit model, which I think, you know, we've talked a little bit about before, that's a single company, you know, big public company, you know, Magnificent Seven type stock.

What we've learned as we have gotten down that rabbit hole is that's, you know, to borrow Paul, Paul's phrase, although B.B. King wasn't a one—he was far from a one hit wonder, but that's a bit of a one hit wonder, meaning we think we can create a lot of value doing that, but then it's a, you know, one-time event, creates a lot of value, and then we're working for that entity basically for the next 15 years.

Whereas if we pursue the co-location... And by the way, sorry, just backing up, Mike, that's obviously very financeable because that corporate, right, is an A-plus credit. And so generally speaking, you can get 80%-90% financing at 250-300 basis points behind the corporate credit. And so that's different.

If you go to co-location, the middle column, it's essentially the same business, but instead of the sort of magnificent seven type stock taking all the profits, because as we know, those companies are all very profitable, you know, Wolf gets to effectively bring in third parties to help us manage that, because that's, you know, our business is in cloud compute.

But we can leverage third parties that aggregate enterprise customers, and then, you know, finance off that. And so initially, that is, that is equity, but as that business matures, it is also financeable, you know, up to kind of 80-ish%.

It's kind of baby steps because you've got to aggregate the customers, and then there's sort of safety in numbers once you have a bunch of customers in there, as opposed to just financing off of the back of the corporate credit rating of one customer. Does that make sense? Yeah, that's helpful.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Bill Papanastasiou with Stifel. Please go ahead.

Bill Papanastasiou (Senior Equity research Analyst)

Good evening, gentlemen. I appreciate the transparency in the slide deck and those funny analogies on dilution. For my first question, I'm just curious to hear whether there's been an uptick in the number of subscale Bitcoin mining peers knocking on your door following the Halving event, just given the dynamics on mining economics. You know, do any of these peers have compelling assets or operations that would be of appetite to TeraWulf today? Or will the focus remain on the existing growth plans at Lake Mariner and the HPC AI business?

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

Yeah, Paul, do you want?

Paul Prager (CEO)

I'm happy to. Yeah, sure. Listen, I think we have to focus on execution of our business plan, and that's what we're focused on. We have. You know, even when Nazar mentioned earlier, like pushing Nautilus's expansion out to 2025, it's because we have such a low cost to build at Lake Mariner, that it just makes sense for us to focus on the careful and considerate execution of our business plan with our existing sites.

That said, everybody in the space is talking to everybody in the space. And, as you know, we have a management team that's been together for a very, very long time, that are really focused on energy infrastructure.

As Patrick, you know, went off about a little while ago, really focused on EBITDA per exahash at the smallest dilution to the shareholders. So culturally, finding somebody that would be a right fit for us is probably not easy. And we're very focused as well on the carbon-free element to our energy. So I think that, sure, you know, everybody is chatting. Are there many likely dates? I don't think so.

I think we need to focus on just execution, paying down our debt, and run our way. I think, you know, the institutions, when they come to the market, are coming to us. They're appreciating the level of transparency and the actual performance that TeraWulf is delivering under Nazar and Patrick.

I think that we just need to continue to get that message out to the real world. I mean, if you, again, take a look at that slide 11, you know, we're talking about EBITDA per exahash, and then you take a look at the massive dilution on the right side of the page versus hardly any on the left side of the page.

And then when you put in that third column where you look at stock-based comp, I mean, it really is very troubling, and you'll see that there just are a lot of companies out there that just they shouldn't be out there. And it doesn't make sense for us to sort of join with them because, you know, we're all about making money through the appreciation of the shares of our stock. We're aligned with our investors. That's sort of how I look at it. Culture is a big issue with us because, again, focused on energy infrastructure and been around a long time.

Bill Papanastasiou (Senior Equity research Analyst)

I appreciate that color. Shifting gears, just hoping to get some more color on the debt repayment plans. Previously, there were talks about potentially refinancing once the indebtedness dipped below $100 million. Should we assume that that's completely off the table and, you know, full repayment's gonna happen before 2024? Any color you can provide there?

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

Yeah, Bill, it's Patrick. So like I said, on, you'll see in our updated slide deck on page 12, you know, we've laid out the capital bridge for 2024. Our free cash flow this year will take care of all of our debt, and then we've got some commitments out there for building 5. Also, laying the foundation, you'll see on that page, we've got a bar chart that says LMD site electrical.

That's some electrical work that we're doing on the site that will allow us to expand, you know, into 300 MW very quickly. So some significant line expansion, transformers, upgrades that we're doing.

So I think, yeah, I mean, look, if the financing markets get more affordable or if we wanna sort of combine that debt maybe with a debt financing at the compute business, yeah, I mean, there's a lot of options on the table that would then decrease the capital need there. But I think for now, our view is let's just, you know, the biggest asset of our company is the cash flow generating ability because our power costs are so low and our profitability is so high. So let's take advantage of that, get rid of the debt, and then, you know, start to look to the future.

Bill Papanastasiou (Senior Equity research Analyst)

Awesome. Thanks for answering the questions, and congrats on the strong operating cash flow.

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

Thanks, Bill.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Marcelo Rasi, a private investor. Please go ahead.

Speaker 11

Hey, everyone. Thanks for taking the question. I understood Nautilus runs on $0.02 per kWh, but earlier in the call, somebody mentioned there was seasonality power cost adjustments. Can you elaborate on that? What percentage of the power is subject to seasonality?

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

Yeah, sure, Marcelo. It's a good question. It's Patrick Fleury. So, we have 210 MW in operation right now, 50 MW at Nautilus. That is fixed power at $0.02. And then the 160 that we have at Lake Mariner, which is soon to be 195 when Building 4 comes online July first, that power floats, and we realize generally Zone A power prices in New York ISO at that plant. And so you can see, if you look on page 20 of our updated deck, that power generally at Lake Mariner has been around $0.04.

Last year, for the entire year, 2023, we realized a blended $0.032 at both sites, and that was roughly $0.02 at Nautilus and I think $0.036 or $0.038 at Lake Mariner. Yeah, there are typically in the first quarter, our power is a little higher. In the shoulder months, which tends to be, you know, the second quarter and the fourth quarter, those tend to be really low price periods at Lake Mariner because there's no real demand there.

The demand is really a function of heating and cooling days, so it's mostly in the winter, where it gets real cold for a couple of weeks, and then in the summer, where it's real humid for a couple of weeks. But that's the beauty about being 30 miles east of Niagara Falls.So yeah, so we haven't changed our guidance for the year. It's still that we expect to realize $0.035, and like I said, we feel good because we realized $0.032 last year.

Speaker 11

Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Bob Evans with Pennington Capital. Please go ahead. Mr. Evans, please go ahead with the question.

Paul Prager (CEO)

Can you hear me?

Bob Evans (Managing Partner)

Hi. Thanks for taking my question. Just to follow up on a prior question, just to get a sense of scale that you're thinking for the HPC AI opportunity. I know you're looking at the middle part of the slide, but again, is this a hundreds of millions of revenue opportunity? Or give us some sense of scale, at least what we should think this should ramp to. I know you're trying to put various clients into this project, but just give us a sense of revenue potential.

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

Yeah, look, I think, Bob, you know, as we kind of put on the page, right, I mean, if we took our 300 open MW at Lake Mariner, right? It would be, you know, you can multiply 300 times 1.3 and 1.5, right? So it's, you know, $300 million-$450 million. So I think Nazar, you know, answered earlier, like, we expect it to be in the $hundreds of millions.

You know, I think at this point, we're not committed to dedicating, as Paul mentioned, all of that capacity to HPC AI, because we're very good at Bitcoin mining as well. But we're also infrastructure people, and, you know, there's a big business that sits outside of the public company as well. So I think I would just say stay tuned.There's lots to come this year on that.

Bob Evans (Managing Partner)

Okay. And then is the right way to look at it on the cost per megawatt and revenue per megawatt? I mean, if we just take the midpoints of both of those ranges and divide it out, does that mean it's, because my understanding is that this business might be kind of a payback period of a couple of years, but if I do that math, it might look like it's longer than that. I'm just trying to understand the right way to think of cash generated and paying for itself.

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

Yeah. So it's a—that's a really good question, Bob. So, so we are. And look, I, I just—I wanna caveat this because, you know, we put down a lot of numbers here on the page, on page 14, and you'll see that it says, the title of the page is Potential Illustrative Business Models. And I, I just want to point out, Bob, that we've been, we're, you know, we're, we're a hardworking, smart management team, but we've been studying this business for nine months. Right?

We've been in the private power business for 30. So, you know, when you're in the—in your lane for 30 years and you get into a new lane, you know, there's a lot of work to do before you get run, you don't wanna get run over. So this is our initial learning. But I think generally speaking, the cloud business, right, so the far left column,

Bob Evans (Managing Partner)

Yep.

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

Much more revenue in, sorry, much more capital-intensive business, but quicker paybacks, right? Because people are desperate for GPU as a service type business. We're more focused again, I think our sweet spot, as Nazar pointed out, we're infrastructure people, and we also don't necessarily, we aren't comfortable taking the GPU technology risk yet, that the far left column would require. So the colocation business, yeah, to your point, it doesn't have the sort of 18-month to 36-month payback.

It's more of a kinda, I would say, 3- to 8-year payback period, but that's still pretty good. And that business, like we said, we think these multiples down here on the bottom of the page are very conservative, but our view is, you know, that should be a 10- to 20- stable multiple business over time. We think we can create a lot more value with less capital, focusing on that middle column versus either the left or the right.

Bob Evans (Managing Partner)

Okay. So if I was gonna simplify it, we'd say, you, you believe you can build a multi-hundred-million-dollar business with, call it 70%+ EBITDA margins, that should have a higher EBITDA value multiple than, than, you know, than, than a lot of other options out there?

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

Good. Yeah, correct. And the only thing I would add is less capital intensity as well.

Bob Evans (Managing Partner)

Okay.

Paul Prager (CEO)

Yeah, but I would want to just say one other thing. As Nazar mentioned in this presentation, you know, we've got these 2 MW at Wolf Den, and we're putting up a 10-MW facility. So we are, we're not set, Bob, on what we're gonna do here.

We're set on taking the experience of Wolf Den to, and putting up this 10-MW building, and continuing to refine our analysis to come with the right program for TeraWulf, utilizing both the existing infrastructure that we have and the access to large, massive other infrastructure that we would have sort of outside of the public vehicle. So that's, that's the point. The 2 MW and the 10 MW are us dipping our toe in the water in the prudent way to ensure we come with the right answer on behalf of our shareholders.

Bob Evans (Managing Partner)

I get that, and I agree with you, and that obviously, if things work out to anywhere on this slide, it's a higher multiple, more predictable business model. So I agree. Thank you. Thanks for clarifying.

Patrick Fleury (CFO)

Thanks, Bob.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of question and answer session. I would now like to turn the floor over to Jason Assad for closing comments.

Jason Assad (Head of Investor Relations)

Thank you, operator. That concludes today's conference call. Thank you for joining us. Please note this has been one of our highest attended calls, so thank you for the continued and growing support. I'd also like to again remind you about our new investor deck, which may be found on our website at TeraWulf.com.