The Numbers Are Starting to Agree With the Bulls
Hut 8 Corp. (HUT) is getting a second look from value investors, and the timing is interesting. The company's value score just crossed the 50th percentile, moving from 48.21 to 55.07—a 6.86-point jump that puts it in the upper half of all ranked companies. That's not just a statistical blip. It's happening right as Eric Jackson, founder of EMJ Capital, announced he's going long on the stock.
Jackson's thesis is straightforward: Wall Street still thinks of Hut 8 as a Bitcoin (BTC) miner, but that's old news. The company has been pivoting hard into AI infrastructure, and Jackson argues its power and data center assets are significantly undervalued. He expects a major re-rating once the company locks in AI and high-performance computing tenants.
More Than Just Crypto Mining
The value metric here is a composite score that compares a stock's market price against fundamental measures like assets, earnings, and sales. When that number rises, it means the stock is looking cheaper relative to what it actually owns and generates. For Hut 8, that shift aligns perfectly with Jackson's qualitative argument that the market hasn't caught up to the company's transformation.
It's not just about valuation, either. Hut 8 is showing serious momentum, with a score of 92.50 indicating strong relative price strength. The stock has climbed 72.22% year-to-date and 50.56% over the past year. It closed 2.06% higher on Monday at $37.70 per share, though it dipped 1.35% in premarket trading on Tuesday.
What's Driving the Optimism?
The bull case rests on a pretty compelling narrative: Hut 8 has the physical infrastructure—power capacity and data centers—that AI companies desperately need. As demand for high-performance computing grows, those assets become more valuable. Jackson thinks the market is still pricing Hut 8 like it's just another crypto play, missing the bigger opportunity in AI infrastructure.
The stock maintains positive trends over both medium and long-term periods, and the improving valuation metric suggests more investors are starting to see what Jackson sees. Whether that translates into a sustained re-rating depends on how quickly Hut 8 can convert its infrastructure into contracted revenue from AI tenants.
For now, the combination of improving fundamentals, strong momentum, and a high-profile activist investor taking a position makes Hut 8 worth watching. The market might finally be catching on to what the company is actually building.