MarketBeat's stock screener has pulled three names onto today's watch list: Core Scientific, Globant, and Figure Technologies. All three trade on public markets and have direct exposure to blockchain infrastructure or services.

Core Scientific operates bitcoin mining hardware and data centers. The company runs large-scale mining operations tied to network security incentives and hardware efficiency gains. Mining firms live or die on electricity costs and uptime, so their quarterly reports tend to telegraph broader bitcoin price moves and hash-rate competition.

Globant is a software and IT services company that works on blockchain integration for enterprise clients. Unlike pure-play miners or token projects, Globant's blockchain revenue flows through conventional enterprise contracts, which means it sits one layer removed from direct protocol volatility.

Figure Technologies builds blockchain infrastructure for financial services, including settlement and lending products. The company has positioned itself as a bridge between traditional finance and distributed ledger rails. Its success depends on adoption by regulated institutions, which moves slower than consumer crypto hype cycles but carries longer runway if it takes hold.

What the screener flags

MarketBeat's tool pulls stocks based on technical and fundamental metrics the screener weights for momentum or value. A stock landing on the list does not signal a buy recommendation. The screener's criteria shift, and the tool surfaces candidates for research, not endorsements.

Blockchain stocks as a category include firms that develop platforms, provide software or services, or embed blockchain into existing operations. This spans mining hardware makers, exchange operators, wallet providers, and enterprise software shops that have added blockchain modules to their product lines. The category is broad and heterogeneous, so comparing a miner to an enterprise software vendor directly usually misses what actually drives their earnings.

For investors watching mining stocks in particular, the key metrics are hash rate per unit of power consumed, electricity cost per joule, and hardware refresh cycles. Those fundamentals matter more than sentiment. For service providers like Globant, the relevant questions are contract wins, renewal rates, and whether blockchain revenue is growing faster than the core business. For infrastructure plays like Figure, track regulatory approvals and actual deployment use cases, not roadmap timelines.

The newsroom has not independently verified the screener's methodology or timing.