Riot Platforms Falls After the Bitcoin Miner Is Targeted by Short-Seller Kerrisdale
The firm has previously targeted MicroStrategy.

Bitcoin miner Riot Platforms (RIOT) underperformed peers on Wednesday after prominent short-seller Kerrisdale Capital said it's short RIOT stock and long bitcoin
Kerrisdale accused the miner of burning cash and gouging retail shareholders through its at-the-market (ATM) funding strategy.
"Like other US listed miners, $RIOT’s biz model is a dysfunctional hamster wheel of cash burn, which is why it loots retail shareholders with non-stop ATM issuance to fund operations. Even with $BTC near all-time highs, post-halving $RIOT’s mining ops aren’t profitable," the firm said in a social media post on X (formerly Twitter).
The short-seller also noted it's holding
Riot's shares were among the worst-performing crypto-linked stocks on Wednesday, declining over 6%, while
The move comes only a week after Riot started a hostile takeover of its peer Bitfarms (BITF) by buying 9.25% of the company to become its large shareholder.
This isn't the first time Kerrisdale has targeted crypto-related stocks. On March 28, the firm said it shorted Michael Saylor's MicroStrategy (MSTR), citing an unjustifiable premium. MSTR stock initially fell on the report but has recovered somewhat since then. However, the shares are still trading about 14% lower than before the short report became public.
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What to know:
- Bitcoin surged towards $100,000 on Wednesday's U.S. trading session, gaining 3.2% in the past 24 hours.
- The rally coincided with significant spot BTC price premium on Coinbase.
- Fed Chair Jerome Powell called bitcoin a competitor to gold during a panel discussion.











