Despite an ongoing crypto bull market, it appears that demand for Bitcoin application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) miners and servers has been lukewarm.
On Feb. 27, Bitcoin ASIC manufacturer Canaan reported Q4 2023 earnings. In its report, the company disclosed revenue of $49 million, representing a decrease of 16% compared to the same period last year. Meanwhile, the firm’s net loss widened to $139 million versus $91.6 million in Q4 2022. Despite an increase in the amount of computing power sold and Bitcoin (BTC) price recovery, Canaan said that its ASICs were sold at lower prices compared to the market last year.
In addition, the firm forecasts tougher market conditions ahead. “For the first quarter of 2024 and the second quarter of 2024, the Company expects total revenues to be approximately US$33 million and US$70 million, respectively, considering the challenging market conditions across the industry,” Canaan stated. During the quarter, the firm recognized a non-cash inventory writedown of $55 million due to pricing pressures.
Bitcoin has seen stellar gains recently, with a return of 144.4% over the past year. Parallel to the price increase, BTC’s mining difficulty has also doubled to 81.73 trillion during the same period. Coupled with persistently high electricity prices and the next Bitcoin halving in April, where mining rewards will be reduced by 50%, the Bitcoin mining industry will likely face new headwinds even as the coin’s price returns to all-time highs. Canaan writes:
On Feb. 16, Cointelegraph reported that 20% of Bitcoin miners’ hash rate could go offline post-halving due to lack of profitability. “Given how sensitive the breakevens are for the various ASIC models to Bitcoin price and transaction fees as a percent of rewards, we estimate that between 15 – 20% of network hash rate coming from the ASIC models could come offline,” wrote analysts at Galaxy Research.
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