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Decoding WhiteFiber’s IPO: Bit Digital’s AI Infrastructure Arm Steps Into the Spotlight
WhiteFiber, Bit Digital’s (BTBT) HPC/AI subsidiary, just launched its IPO under WYFI. I dug into the filings to break down key details and what it means for both companies.
A Look at WhiteFiber’s Initial Public Offering
The following guest post comes from Bitcoinminingstock.io, the one-stop hub for all things bitcoin mining stocks, educational tools, and industry insights. Originally published on July 31, 2025, it was penned by Bitcoinminingstock.io author Cindy Feng.
WhiteFiber Inc., the high-performance computing (HPC) and AI infrastructure subsidiary of Bit Digital (NASDAQ: BTBT), has launched its initial public offering. The company is offering 7,812,500 ordinary shares at a proposed price range of $15.00 to $17.00 per share, with underwriters granted a 30-day option to purchase an additional 1,171,875 shares. Upon listing under the ticker WYFI on the Nasdaq Capital Market, WhiteFiber will become a publicly traded provider of AI-focused cloud and data center services.
This public debut is more than a routine capital raise; it’s a deliberate move by Bit Digital to spotlight and monetize its fast-growing AI infrastructure business. The offering comes at a time when the market is rewarding companies tied to AI. Public miners like Core Scientific and IREN are generally appreciated in the capital market. WhiteFiber seems to seek a similar recognition. As I previously covered, Bit Digital’s AI/HPC unit stood out for delivering significant revenue despite having a modest crypto mining footprint.
However, this progress was recently overshadowed by Bit Digital’s pivot from Bitcoin to an Ethereum treasury strategy, a direction not all investors are confident in. As such, WhiteFiber’s IPO can be seen as a strategic step to separate a high-growth infrastructure story from crypto’s volatility.
WhiteFiber’s Relationship with Bit Digital: A Strategic Carve-Out
It’s important to note: WhiteFiber is not a spin-off. There will be no share distribution to Bit Digital shareholders. Instead, this is a carve-out IPO where Bit Digital is selling a 20% stake of its AI/HPC business to the public while retaining ~80% ownership and voting control post-offering, qualifying WhiteFiber as a “controlled company” under Nasdaq rules.
What this means for investors: you won’t automatically receive WhiteFiber shares just by holding Bit Digital stock. But Bit Digital’s balance sheet will benefit from any market upsides of WhiteFiber, and the move helps reduce perceived crypto-related risk in WYFI financials.
In terms of leadership, WhiteFiber has a newly assembled team but several key members of Bit Digital’s executives will retain overlapping roles. Additionally, it appoints independent directors with domain expertise. Overall, this structure ensures continuity and strategic alignment, especially during a high-growth phase, but also raises questions about eventual governance independence.
Milestones That Signal Intentional Buildout
WhiteFiber’s timeline stretches back to October 2023, when Bit Digital launched its AI unit and signed its first GPU cloud services customer under the name Bit Digital AI, Inc. The formal incorporation of WhiteFiber as a holding vehicle followed in August 2024, under the name Celer, Inc. Here’s a condensed timeline of strategic developments:
Pieced together, these milestones reflect a company that is rapidly scaling and doing so through strategic partnerships, targeted acquisitions, and secured power agreements. This is not speculative growth. It is calculated and resource-backed.
What WhiteFiber Actually Offers
WhiteFiber operates two tightly integrated services tailored to generative AI workloads:
Together, this integrated model gives WhiteFiber stronger unit economics than a disaggregated operator, with upside in both infrastructure margin and GPU utilization.
Portfolio and Pipeline: Scale Is the Next Test
WhiteFiber’s operational portfolio includes:
WhiteFiber forecasts reaching 76MW of gross capacity by the end of 2026. The company also notes a broader pipeline under management review totaling ~1,300MW, with 800MW under non-binding letters of intent.
Revenue Momentum – But a Word of Caution
WhiteFiber reported $14.8 million in revenue for Q1 2025 from its cloud business, with full-year 2024 revenue reaching $45.7 million. As of June 2025, WhiteFiber had roughly 4,000 GPUs under contract, with more expected.
Yet despite the growing bottom line, we must remember that Bit Digital previously missed its $100 million annualized revenue target. The shortfall invites a more cautious interpretation of projections. While management models $1.6 million in annual revenue per MW at ~75% EBITDA margin, these figures remain theoretical until new sites go live and customers scale usage.
While these contracts provide important early revenue visibility, they also create risk: if a top customer delays deployment or underutilizes contracted capacity, quarterly revenue could swing sharply.
Capital Requirements and Financing
WhiteFiber’s growth strategy is capital intensive. It estimates data center development costs of $7–9 million per MW, excluding real estate costs of ~$1 million per MW. Approximately 70% of this capex is expected to be financed with facility-level debt, as evidenced by the recent $43.8M CAD facility from Royal Bank of Canada.
Beyond this IPO, WhiteFiber is likely to seek further capital, either from equipment leasing partners, institutional JV capital, or public follow-ons. Its ability to secure this capital efficiently will be critical in meeting its 2026 buildout targets.
Final Thoughts
WhiteFiber’s IPO offers a chance to invest in a pure-play AI infrastructure company with real customers, a meaningful revenue base, and a clearly defined buildout strategy. It also gives Bit Digital a cleaner structure, freeing its crypto-exposed balance sheet from its most promising growth segment. In short, WhiteFiber gains operational clarity and financing flexibility while Bit Digital benefits from its market upsides.
That said, the road ahead isn’t guaranteed. WhiteFiber will now compete with established cloud providers and AI-native infrastructure platforms. Execution timelines will be scrutinized. Contracts will need to convert to revenue. And investors will be watching to see if the company can maintain momentum beyond its initial growth spurt.
Given Bit Digital’s prior revenue miss, I remain conservatively optimistic. The demand is real. The partnerships are strong. But until more of its pipeline turns into recurring, diversified revenue, I’ll stay grounded in what’s already been delivered.
P.S. The primary SEC filing referenced in this report is available here*. Page numbers refer to those displayed in the original document.*