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JPMorgan and
have upgraded (RIOT) to overweight and buy ratings, respectively, citing the miner’s strategic pivot into artificial intelligence (AI) and high-performance computing (HPC) as a key growth catalyst. Both firms raised price targets, with lifting its target to $19 from $15 and Citigroup to $24 from $13.75. The upgrades follow a shift in the industry’s economic landscape, with analysts highlighting Riot’s potential to capitalize on HPC colocation deals and cloud services as mining profitability tightens. JPMorgan assigned a 50% probability that could secure near-term HPC agreements, benchmarking Core Scientific’s $3.7–$8.6 million per megawatt (MW) deals as a reference point[1].The strategic pivot has positioned Riot as a standout among its peers. JPMorgan analysts labeled it the “most attractive among its mining peers,” emphasizing its capacity for HPC expansion and operational flexibility. Citigroup’s Peter Christiansen noted Riot’s “ramping transition to AI and HPC” as the primary driver for the upgrade, underscoring the company’s ability to leverage existing infrastructure for compute-intensive workloads[2]. The firm’s stock surged 5.32% pre-market to $17.63 following the ratings change, outperforming a broader sector that fell sharply amid declining mining margins[3].
Riot’s expansion into AI and cloud services is underpinned by its energy-efficient data center infrastructure, originally designed for Bitcoin mining. Analysts estimate HPC colocation contracts could generate $4.8–$11.2 million per critical IT MW, while GPU cloud services might yield ~$5.3 million per MW[4]. These benchmarks reflect growing enterprise demand for compute resources, a trend accelerated by the post-halving reduction in Bitcoin mining profitability. JPMorgan’s analysis suggests Riot’s relative upside could reach +14%, outpacing peers like IREN and CleanSpark, which face higher downside risks due to overvaluation of potential HPC deals[5].
The upgrades contrast with downgrades for other major miners. IREN and CleanSpark were cut to underweight and neutral, respectively, as JPMorgan flagged uncertainty around large-scale HPC deals. Meanwhile, Cipher Mining (CIFR) received a price target boost to $12, and MARA Holdings maintained an overweight rating with a reduced target. The divergent analyst sentiment highlights a broader industry bifurcation: miners diversifying into AI/HPC are gaining traction, while pure-play operators face valuation pressures[6].
Riot’s financials, however, remain mixed. Despite a $6.59 billion market cap, the company reports a -17.5% net margin and -19.7% three-year revenue growth. Analysts caution that while its EBITDA margin of 86.54% signals robust cash flow, liquidity concerns persist due to a -23.76% free cash flow yield. Insider selling and a Piotroski F-Score of 1 further underscore operational challenges[7]. Nevertheless, the firm’s Altman Z-Score of 3.6 and Beneish M-Score of -3.27 indicate low bankruptcy risk and minimal financial manipulation, offering some reassurance to investors[8].
The broader market context reinforces Riot’s strategic shift. Bitcoin miners are increasingly repurposing energy-intensive infrastructure for AI workloads, with companies like Core Scientific and TerraWulf seeing outsized gains in September. JPMorgan’s preference for “pure-play operators” aligns with this trend, as investors seek exposure to companies with scalable, diversified revenue streams[9].
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