The shift particularly pressures firms that rely on third-party computing partnerships for sustained growth.
TeraWulf has continued its infrastructure development despite the financial shortfall.
The company previously announced the acquisition of the Muskie Data Campus in eastern Kentucky to secure long-term capacity.
"The defining constraint in this market is no longer computing hardware — it is power, transmission infrastructure, and execution certainty," stated Paul Prager, CEO of TeraWulf.
The company plans to develop the Kentucky site to handle over 1 gigawatt of power, with the initial 500 megawatts scheduled to go operational in the second half of 2028.
Traders continue to monitor technical support levels near $20.60 as regular market sessions resume.
"Preparation plus patience leads to big profits," stated penny stock trader and teacher Tim Sykes.
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"Volatile stocks are great teachers — they reward discipline and punish hope," Sykes added.