Starboard Value Takes Activist Stake in Riot Platforms: A Catalyst for Transformation?
Activist investor Starboard Value has acquired a significant stake in Riot Platforms, a major bitcoin mining and digital infrastructure company. This move throws a spotlight on Riot’s operational inefficiencies and untapped potential in the high-performance computing (HPC) market. While Riot boasts impressive bitcoin mining operations and a substantial bitcoin holding of **16,728 bitcoins**, its stock underperformance relative to its peers raises serious questions about management’s strategic direction and, specifically, its ability to capitalize on massive opportunities. Starboard’s intervention could be the catalyst Riot needs to unlock significant shareholder value.
Key Takeaways: Riot Platforms Faces Activist Pressure
- Activist Investor Involvement: Starboard Value, a highly successful activist investor with a proven track record, has taken a stake in Riot Platforms, signaling potential for significant change.
- Operational Inefficiencies: Riot’s high selling, general, and administrative (SG&A) expenses and excessive executive compensation are highlighted as major concerns by Starboard.
- Untapped HPC Market Potential: Riot’s substantial mining infrastructure can be leveraged to serve the growing demand from hyperscalers like Amazon Web Services and Google Cloud for HPC and AI data center capacity, a path its competitors are successfully exploring.
- Significant Financial Opportunity: Converting existing mining facilities for HPC use offers potentially billions of dollars in incremental revenue for Riot.
- Corporate Governance Issues: Starboard’s likely focus will extend beyond operational improvements to address issues of corporate governance at Riot.
Riot Platforms: A Powerful Miner, But a Struggling Stock
Riot Platforms, with a current market value of $3.97 billion ($11.55 per share), is a leading player in the bitcoin mining industry. Its operations span multiple locations, including central Texas and Kentucky, and boast over 1 gigawatt (GW) of developed power capacity. Riot’s vertical integration – owning and operating its mining facilities – allows it theoretically to directly control costs. The company is structured around two segments: Bitcoin Mining and Engineering. The Engineering segment provides further diversification by designing and manufacturing power distribution equipment.
Underperformance Amidst Bullish Market Conditions
Despite Bitcoin’s impressive 130% year-to-date (YTD) increase and a generally positive regulatory environment, Riot’s stock price has experienced a 24% decline prior to Starboard’s announcement. This underperformance, particularly when compared to peers achieving over 100% YTD returns, points to a significant lack of market confidence in the company’s current management of its assets.
Operational and Financial Challenges
Starboard’s concerns center on Riot’s operational efficiency and financial strategy. The company’s SG&A expenses have ballooned to $225 million in the past year, up from $67 million in 2022. A significant contributor is stock-based compensation paid to executives, with payouts constituting 11.5%, 9.5%, and 32.12% of total revenue over the past three years, respectively, despite the company consistently reporting losses. This has led to Riot posting the highest power cost plus cash SG&A expense per coin, despite having reasonably cheap power sources, and the highest stock compensation per coin in the industry.
Furthermore, Riot’s three-year return stands at a negative -54.7%, further highlighting the need for a strategic overhaul.
Starboard’s Strategy: Operational Improvements and HPC Expansion
Starboard, with its extensive history of successful activist campaigns (155 campaigns, with an average return of 23.27% compared to 15.27% for the Russell 2000), plans a two-pronged approach to unlock Riot’s potential. First, Starboard will likely push for significant operational improvements, targeting:
- Reduction of SG&A expenses
- Right-sizing executive compensation to align with performance
- Improved corporate governance.
The second, and potentially more lucrative, aspect of Starboard’s strategy centers on capitalizing on the explosive demand for HPC infrastructure from hyperscalers. Riots’ massive existing mining facilities, particularly those in Texas, are ideally suited for repurposing or co-locating to serve this market.
The Hyperscaler Opportunity: A Multi-Billion Dollar Potential
The HPC market for AI and cloud computing is booming, driving intense competition among hyperscalers such as Amazon, Microsoft, and Google to secure sufficient computing capacity. Riot’s already established facilities possess many required inputs: high-performance computing infrastructure, access to renewable energy, energy management expertise, and operational scalability. Converting existing facilities for HPC applications is significantly cheaper and faster than building new ones, representing a compelling opportunity for Riot. The success of Core Scientific’s partnership with CoreWeave, securing a $8.7 billion, 12-year deal to deliver 500 megawatts (MW) of capacity, serves as a powerful example of the potential rewards which can result from this strategy.
Riot’s 700 MW Rockdale facility (the largest in North America) and nearing completion 400MW-plus Corsicana facility are especially well-positioned for this market. Based on Core Scientific’s deal, even a partial conversion of Riot’s existing capacity could yield hundreds of millions of dollars in incremental annual cash flow. The potential to achieve an incremental $600 million in annual cash flow from merely contracting out the 600MW at Corsicana is huge, and could potentially almost triple if Riot were to use its entire projected total capacity.
Will Riot Embrace Change?
While Riot has publicly stated that it welcomes Starboard’s involvement and is open to dialogue, the company’s corporate governance issues and past focus solely on bitcoin mining raise questions about the transition feasibility. Riot’s already purchased $510 million of bitcoin on the open market with the proceeds from a new convertible senior notes offering in recent weeks. This suggests a potential internal conflict of interest that could impede the transition to a more diversified revenue model that includes significant HPC operations.
Ultimately, Riot’s management faces a critical choice: embrace Starboard’s strategy to unlock significant shareholder value, or risk a potentially costly proxy fight and severe damage to shareholder confidence and corporate credibility. The scale of opportunity presented by the hyperscaler market is undeniable, and forgoing it would amount to leaving billions of dollars on the table.
Ken Squire is the founder and president of 13D Monitor, an institutional research service on shareholder activism, and the founder and portfolio manager of the 13D Activist Fund, a mutual fund that invests in a portfolio of activist 13D investments. Riot Platforms is owned in the fund.