WYFI WhiteFiber, Inc.
CATEGORY BREAKDOWN
METRIC BREAKDOWN
Revenue Growth (YoY)
Year-over-year revenue growth rate
> 50% strong
Gross Margin
Revenue retained after direct costs
> 50% strong
Cash Runway
Months of cash at current burn rate
> 24 months ideal
Debt / Equity
Total debt relative to shareholder equity
< 25% strong
Price / Sales
Market cap relative to trailing revenue
< 3x strong
Rule of 40
Growth rate plus operating margin
> 40 excellent
Insider Ownership
Percentage of shares held by insiders
> 20% strong
Share Dilution (12M)
Share count increase over last 12 months
< 5% ideal
SCORE HISTORY
RESEARCH NOTE
BUSINESS SUMMARY
WhiteFiber is a GPU-cloud and HPC infrastructure provider focused on AI-training and inference workloads. The company sells GPU compute capacity through a combination of long-term hosting agreements with enterprise AI customers and shorter-term capacity for academic and mid-market AI development teams.
The model is closer to specialized data-center colocation than general public-cloud — WhiteFiber owns or leases data-center capacity, populates it with NVIDIA HGX-class GPU systems, and resells access by GPU-hour or by reserved capacity contract.
Revenue is subscription/reservation revenue for committed-capacity customers plus on-demand burst revenue. The customer mix tilts toward enterprise AI labs and AI-application companies that can't economically maintain their own GPU clusters.
MARKET OPPORTUNITY
The AI-compute infrastructure market is one of the most-funded categories in technology — but is also one of the most price-sensitive:
- Enterprise AI labs want capacity flexibility without the capex burden of buying GPU clusters outright
- AI-application companies at growth stage need GPU capacity that scales with their inference traffic but can't justify hyperscaler prices
- Academic / sovereign AI is a smaller but high-margin niche
Macro context: revenue growth of 66% YoY reflects AI-compute demand normalization after the 2023-2024 GPU-allocation scarcity peak. The relevant forward question is whether GPU hourly pricing holds — the entire industry is watching for downward pressure as supply-chain normalizes.
REVENUE QUALITY
The economics are typical for a specialized infrastructure provider:
- Gross margin 62% — moderate-to-high for compute infrastructure; reflects the specialized-workload premium pricing versus generic IaaS
- Operating margin — pressured by ongoing capex for additional GPU capacity
- Revenue $79M TTM — small absolute base; one large enterprise customer can swing quarterly results
- P/S ~8.7 — premium reflecting AI-infrastructure-thematic investor demand
What hides in the data: reservation-revenue-percentage of total and GPU-hour pricing trend are the two leading indicators that headline revenue obscures. Investors should track both separately.
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
The defensible asset is GPU-allocation relationships plus operational expertise:
- NVIDIA-allocation relationships — during peak demand cycles, GPU allocation is the gating constraint; multi-year supplier relationships are advantage
- Specialized data-center capacity — power, cooling, and networking optimized for HGX clusters takes years to build
- Customer-stickiness via long-term reservation contracts — once enterprise customers commit to multi-year capacity, switching costs are real
What it is not: a moat against AWS, GCP, or Azure in their core managed-AI services. The hyperscalers operate at a different scale and integration depth. WhiteFiber's wedge is the mid-market enterprise that wants capacity without hyperscaler complexity.
GROWTH THESIS
Three things have to work:
- GPU-hourly pricing holds. A meaningful price compression compresses the entire model — WhiteFiber doesn't have hyperscaler scale to absorb pricing pressure through volume.
- Customer reservation mix grows. Long-term reservation revenue carries higher LTV and predictability; the on-demand mix is more cyclical.
- GPU-capacity expansion stays funded. Adding capacity is capital-intensive; financing capacity for the next-generation Blackwell-class platforms determines forward-growth ceiling.
KEY RISKS
Three specific risks:
-
Hyperscaler pricing pressure. AWS, GCP, Azure are all ramping their own AI-infrastructure offerings. Aggressive pricing or feature-parity could compress mid-market specialty offerings.
-
GPU-supply-cycle reversal. During peak demand, GPU allocation was the binding constraint; if supply normalizes faster than demand, hourly pricing falls and small specialty providers compress hardest.
-
Single-customer concentration. At sub-$100M revenue, one large enterprise customer represents meaningful share. Loss or contract-renegotiation hits the financials directly.
VERDICT
The 85.4/100 score captures genuine AI-infrastructure-cycle exposure and the post-allocation-crunch revenue ramp. The score under-weights competitive position vs hyperscalers — a real long-term threat that affects all specialty AI-compute providers.
For investors who want AI-infrastructure exposure outside of NVDA itself with operational-leverage on GPU-hourly pricing, WYFI is one of few small-cap pure-plays. For investors who don't want concentrated AI-infrastructure-cycle exposure or who prefer hyperscaler scale, the small-specialty position is disqualifying.
The single metric to watch next is GPU-hourly-pricing-realized trend alongside reservation-revenue mix. Stable pricing + rising reservation mix means the customer-stickiness thesis is working; falling pricing + on-demand mix expansion signals the cycle is normalizing.
Report last updated: May 5, 2026
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DATA INFO
Last updated: May 4, 2026
Sources: SEC EDGAR, Financial Modeling Prep, Yahoo Finance. Not financial advice.