TeraWulf Inc. (WULF) Dividend History
Income profile from 2012 to 2025 with payout safety and yield-on-cost trend
WULF Dividend Income Check
Safety
Payout ratio data not available yet.
Consistency
1 straight years of dividend increases.
Income Trend
Yield on cost trend needs more history.
WULF Dividend Scorecard
Yield & Income
Payout Safety
Growth
Total Returns
Uses precomputed total return metrics from screening data (not lot-by-lot dividend reinvestment transactions). WULF's recent 5Y regime has been stronger than its full 10Y period, so 5Y can appear higher than 10Y.
WULF Income Growth Story
Dividend per share and yield on cost over time (2 years of payments)
WULF Dividend Safety Story
EPS is the container — dividend is what's drawn out
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Monthly dividend calendar — upcoming ex-dates for stocks you follow.
Dividend Analysis
Payout Safety
TeraWulf Inc. has limited earnings payout data (Unknown).
Piotroski F-Score: 1/9 — weak financial health.
Growth Track Record
WULF has raised its dividend for 1 consecutive year.
Total Shareholder Returns
Beyond cash dividends, WULF returns capital through share repurchases. The combined picture: 0.3% buyback yield, 0.3% total shareholder yield.
Income Trend & Total Return
The 5-year total return is 182.9%, with dividends contributing 44.2% of that performance.
DRIP Growth
A $10,000 investment made 10 years ago with dividends reinvested would have grown to approximately $28,143 today.
WULF Recent Dividend Payments
Last 2 payments · Annual
| Ex-Date | Amount | Change | Yield % | Payment Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dec 14, 2021Latest | $5.0000 | ↑ +400.0% | 24.63% | — |
| Dec 18, 2012 | $1.0000 | — | 11.11% | Dec 31, 2012 |
WULF Dividend vs Peers
Comparable companies in the same industry
WULF Annual Dividend History (2000–2025)
21 years of dividend data
| Year | DPS | YoY | Pmts | EPS | Payout | Coverage | YOC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | $0.00 | — | 0 | $-1.66 | — | — | — |
| 2024 | $0.00 | — | 0 | $-0.21 | — | — | — |
| 2023 | $0.00 | — | 0 | $-0.35 | — | — | — |
| 2022 | $0.00 | -100.0% | 0 | $-0.83 | — | — | — |
| 2021 | $5.00 | — | 1 | $-1.12 | — | — | 51.7% |
| 2020 | $0.00 | — | 0 | $-0.22 | — | — | — |
| 2019 | $0.00 | — | 0 | $-0.41 | — | — | — |
| 2018 | $0.00 | — | 0 | $0.07 | — | — | — |
| 2017 | $0.00 | — | 0 | $-0.11 | — | — | — |
| 2016 | $0.00 | — | 0 | $-0.03 | — | — | — |
Intrinsic Valuation
DCF models, multiple analysis, and analyst estimates.
Historical Returns
14+ years return with dividends reinvested.
DCA Calculator
See how regular investing compounds over time.
Peer Comparison
Compare growth, multiples, and margins vs sector.
WULF — Frequently Asked Questions
Quick answers to the most common questions about buying WULF stock.
How much dividend does WULF pay per share?
TeraWulf Inc. (WULF) pays a trailing 12-month dividend of N/A per share, with a current dividend yield of N/A. Payments are made Annual.
When is WULF's next ex-dividend date?
WULF's most recent ex-dividend date is N/A. You must own shares before the ex-dividend date to receive the next payment. WULF typically pays dividends Annual.
Is WULF's dividend safe?
WULF's dividend safety is rated "Unknown" based on an earnings payout ratio of N/A and FCF payout ratio of N/A. The 1-year growth streak provides moderate confidence.
How many years has WULF increased its dividend?
WULF has 1 consecutive years of dividend growth. The 5-year dividend CAGR is N/A.
How often does WULF pay dividends?
TeraWulf Inc. pays dividends Annual. The trailing 12-month total is N/A per share. Dividend data on this page covers 13+ years from 2012 to 2025.
How much would $10,000 invested in WULF grow with dividend reinvestment?
With dividends reinvested (DRIP), $10,000 invested in WULF five years ago would be worth approximately $28,292 today. This includes both price appreciation and compounded dividend reinvestment. Use the DRIP calculator above for other time periods.
What is WULF's yield on cost for long-term holders?
WULF's yield on cost — the current dividend divided by the original purchase price — is N/A for a 5-year holding period. This means long-term holders earn a higher effective yield than today's N/A market yield, thanks to the lower original cost basis.