Today: 8 July 2026
Hyperscale Data Pops After $1 Billion AI Data Center Info, GPUs Draw Fresh Looks

Hyperscale Data Pops After $1 Billion AI Data Center Info, GPUs Draw Fresh Looks

New York, June 15, 2026, 16:49 ET

  • Hyperscale Data jumped 75.7% to $0.2713. Volume cleared 693 million shares today.
  • The company said it’s close to finalizing an AI data center services agreement in Michigan tied to about 20 megawatts of critical power.
  • Markets are waiting to see if a final master services agreement will be signed in the next few weeks.

Hyperscale Data, Inc. (NYSE American: GPUS) jumped in Monday trading, with shares climbing 75.7% to $0.2713 at last check. The name was among the volume leaders in small-cap AI infrastructure. The company said its indirect subsidiary Alliance Cloud Services plans to offer colocation and data center services for AI compute projects out of Michigan. Colocation refers to leasing space, power, and networking, with MW showing available power for large compute needs. Stock opened at $0.2016 and traded between $0.16 and $0.298.

Shares are jumping after the announcement opened up a possible new long-term revenue stream for Bitcoin miners from AI infrastructure. Hyperscale Data says the first 10 MW could go live within 90 days after the deal is signed, with another 10 MW expected in the following 90 days. The company said renewals on these agreements typically add up to more than $1 billion over 20 years. If the deal grows to 52 MW, the total could reach $2.5 billion over the same time. PR Newswire Investors are sending GPUS higher, typical when there’s a shot at new revenue or stronger cash flow.

Hyperscale Data plans to move its Michigan site away from Bitcoin mining and into AI computing, as it looks for better margins by providing GPU power. The company expects to end Bitcoin mining at the campus over the next few months, opening up capacity for new AI customers. CEO Will Horne said, “We are confident in our prospects and believe we will have significant updates for stockholders in the coming days and weeks.” PR Newswire

Risks haven’t gone away: there’s still no final agreement. Management lists several challenges—financing, sign-offs from regulators, infrastructure, engineering reviews, utility contracts, and others. PR Newswire The new quarterlies make the point for investors who want more than promises. Q1 revenue hit $44.1 million versus $25.0 million, but Hyperscale Data still posted a $30.1 million net loss and $216.7 million in liabilities at March 31.

Financing risk is back in focus after the stock jumped Monday. Hyperscale Data made a deal with Yorkville on June 11 for pre-paid advances, giving the company cash now and repayment through future share offerings. According to the SEC filing, the principal stands at $15.958 million, with net proceeds after a 6% cut at $15.00052 million. The annual interest is 4%. This structure ties the share sale price to VWAP, the volume-weighted average price. When financing is linked to shares like this, it can weigh on the stock if investors worry about dilution as more shares hit the market.

GPUS stays in the speculative pile. There’s still risk here, with most big questions around the stock still open. Bulls want to see a Michigan master services agreement in hand and actual progress on funding, building, and operating AI data centers to match the company’s public timeline. Shares have already run on talk of an MSA, but no deal has been inked yet. The balance sheet shows losses, liabilities, and potential for dilution. Next up, investors are looking for a signed customer contract, and then proof that the first 10 MW can go live in 90 days, as promised.

Iwona Majkowska is a financial markets journalist at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, artificial intelligence and technology. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics, she previously worked in equity research and financial analysis before focusing on market reporting. Her daily coverage helps investors follow major developments across U.S. and global markets.

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