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Nvidia fails to sell as many crypto-mining GPUs as expected in Q2

The company expects a minimal contribution from its cryptocurrency mining processor sales going forward.

Nvidia beat the expectations by generating over $6.5 billion in revenue, but the chip manufacturer missed the target for its crypto-mining GPU line.

The California-based tech giant announced its financial results for its second fiscal quarter ended Aug. 1, 2021. Key highlights include $6.51 billion in revenue, 15% up from the first quarter, and $1.04 billion earnings, both largely bolstered by gaming, data center and professional visualization equipment sales.

With the addition of GeForce RTX 3080 Ti and RTX 3070 Ti, the gaming segment led the record growth with $3.06 billion in revenue and an 85% growth from last year. Nvidia’s data center business brought in $2.37 billion in revenue, while its professional visualization products earned $519 million.

Nvidia announced that the company is expecting $6.80 billion in revenue in the third fiscal quarter.

However, one key area fell short of expectations, the earnings call revealed. During the first-quarter earnings call, Nvidia CFO Colette Kress predicted a $400 million revenue for the company’s cryptocurrency mining processor (CMP) line for Q2. Nvidia saw $266 million in CMP sales in the second fiscal quarter, missing its target by a one-third gap. The CMP line was introduced in February and made $155 million in the first quarter.

Related: GPU price inflation dips slightly as Ether downtrend continues

Nvidia is having a hard time balancing the supply between hardcore gamers and crypto miners for its high-end graphics units. The company introduced hash rate limiters to its RTX 3060 series graphics cards to limit the crypto mining capabilities of the units.

At the end of May, Nvidia said it would be applying a reduced Ethereum hash rate to its newly manufactured GeForce RTX 3080, RTX 3070 and RTX 3060 Ti graphics cards. Coming with a “Lite Hash Rate” label, new cards are strictly aimed to meet the demand from gamers rather as opposed to crypto miners.

Explaining that the company’s recent efforts to limit the hash rate of gaming graphics cards aim to ensure enough chip supply for gamers, Kress said the company expects a “minimal contribution” from its crypto-related sales from now on.

SEC sues Nova Labs over alleged unregistered crypto securities offerings

Bitcoin Still Commands the 9th Largest Market Capitalization in the World

Bitcoin Still Commands the 9th Largest Market Capitalization in the WorldDespite the drop in value during the last three months, the leading crypto asset bitcoin is still the ninth most valuable asset in the world in terms of market capitalization. Moreover, bitcoin could flip some of the world’s most valuable assets in the future, as the crypto asset is 67% away from turning over tech […]

SEC sues Nova Labs over alleged unregistered crypto securities offerings

Nvidia GPU prices in China fall amid crypto mining crackdown

Graphics card prices in China reportedly dropped as much as two-thirds on Chinese e-commerce websites.

Amid the ongoing crackdown on cryptocurrency mining in China, prices of graphic cards from major GPU providers like Nvidia and Asus are becoming more affordable. 

According to a Monday report by South China Morning Post (SCMP), prices of some graphic cards have tumbled as much as two-thirds on Chinese e-commerce platforms after Sichuan province terminated mining operations.

Asus’ flagship RTX 3060 card was reportedly down to 4,699 Chinese yuan ($730) on Monday from its peak price of 13,499 yuan ($2,100) in May on JD.com-operated online retail site Tmall.

Nvidia's Quadro P1000, a less advanced card, dropped to 2,429 yuan ($380) on a JD.com franchise store, down from a peak of about 3,000 yuan ($470) in early May, the SCMP reported, citing price changes tracked by e-commerce data provider Manmanbuy.

The price downturn aligns with a major sell-off on the cryptocurrency market, with Bitcoin (BTC) tumbling to $32,500 amid another wave of FUD in China.

Related: Bitcoin hash rate hits 8-month low as Chinese miners power down

On Monday, China’s central bank reiterated the country’s ban on cryptocurrency trading, reportedly urging banks and payment institutions to halt services for accounts associated with crypto trading activity. 

After banning crypto trading back in 2017, the Chinese government has been toughening its stance on crypto recently, launching a major crackdown on cryptocurrency mining. The latest news follows a series of mining bans in several major crypto mining hubs in China including hydropower-based provinces like Sichuan and Yunnan. Authorities in Xinjiang, Inner Mongolia and Qinghai have also ordered mining operations to shutter.

SEC sues Nova Labs over alleged unregistered crypto securities offerings

Nvidia CEO: We’re “on the cusp of” a blockchain and NFT-enabled metaverse

Nvidia's new Voyager campus is serving as a test ground for what it will look like when then Metaverse meets the physical world.

One of the most powerful men in tech thinks that the metaverse — a term for a series of interlinked, persistent virtual worlds with self-contained economies — is just around the corner. 

One of the most exciting use cases for blockchain and NFTs, enthusiasts inspired by Neal Stephenson’s Snow Crash have long been hoping for a VR/AR world with a crypto-powered internal market. Now, however, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang thinks the technology to make it happen is on our doorstep.

Speaking at the virtual Computex conference, Huang said that he “believe(s) we’re right on the cusp of” the metaverse and spoke glowingly of its potential, according to a transcript of a Q&A session he had with reporters — going as far as to say that users will one day use metaverses to “simulate the future.”

RELATED: Terra Virtua releases ‘Godzilla vs. Kong’ NFTs to coincide with movie release

“There will be AR versions, where the art that you have is a digital art. You own it using NFT. You’ll display that beautiful art, that’s one of a kind, and it’s completely digital. You’ll have our glasses on or your phone. You can see that it’s sitting right there, perfectly lit, and it belongs to you. We’ll see this overlay, a metaverse overlay if you will, into our physical world,” he said.

He noted that Nvidia is already using a VR version of Nvidia’s new office building to test these theories, a campus that the company has dubbed “Voyager.” Among the world’s largest manufacturers of GPUs, Nvidia used supercomputers to “simulate architecture” for Voyager, helping with design and ecological efficiency, and eventually the company will allow employees to attend work by wearing VR headsets from home and controlling robots to move about the physical office space, a joint VR/physical workplace hybrid.

“This building completely exists in VR. We designed it completely digitally. We’re going to build it out so that there will be a digital twin of this very physical building in VR. We’ll be able to simulate everything, train our robots in it. We can simulate how best to distribute the air conditioning to reduce the energy consumption [...] We can simulate all of that in our digital twin, our building metaverse, before we deploy anything here in the physical world. We’ll be able to go in and out of it using VR and AR.”

Huang isn’t the only CEO who has weighed in on NFTs and the Metaverse as of late, though he’s certainly the most optimistic. In January Fortnite founder Tim Sweeney said that NFTs are the most “plausible” path towards a functioning metaverse, but for now they remain a “speculative mess.” 

SEC sues Nova Labs over alleged unregistered crypto securities offerings

Fortunes turning? Specialized GPUs and SSDs come to aid crypto miners

Manufacturers restrict mining of cryptocurrencies due to a shortage of GPU cards: Will this lead to the end of mining as we know it?

After an exceptional start to the year, the crypto market entered a bearish period in mid-May, causing some to reevaluate their stance on some of the fundamentals surrounding the crypto industry.

The prolonged fall of Bitcoin (BTC) — by more than 50% — and the subsequent dip in mining difficulty by 16%, which are suspected to have been partially caused by news of China’s intention to take tough measures against crypto mining and trading, as well as Tesla’s decision to stop accepting Bitcoin as payment for its electric vehicles, have turned out to be a turning point that brought criticism of crypto to a new level.

Against this background, some commentators and crypto enthusiasts have started talking about the possible end of the mining era. Or is it just a new beginning and a way for the industry to reinvent itself and make use of new solutions to appease the ever-expanding number of stakeholders?

Hardware deficit and price growth

The first bell actually rang back in February this year, when buyers of GPU cards, whether they are miners or gamers, had begun talking about a severe shortage of available cards, which led to exorbitant price increases.

For example, in the United States, some models of cards have risen in price by 120%. It should be noted, however, that the lack of components that make up the video cards have played an important role in such a price hike. What’s more, the slowdown in global supply chains on the back of COVID-19 restrictions has only exacerbated the already dire situation.

Given the spread of hysteria surrounding the short supply of GPU cards, miners were looking for alternative ways of mining cryptocurrencies as new cryptocurrencies, such as Chia (XCH), appeared. Mining this cryptocurrency requires the use of a solid-state drive (SSD), which is used for storing user data on a personal computer and is several times cheaper than GPU cards.

Chia uses free space on the device’s storage, and the more free gigabytes there are, the faster this cryptocurrency will be mined. In addition, Bram Cohen, creator of Chia Network, argued that his cryptocurrency is environmentally friendly compared to others because hard drives consume significantly less power than GPU cards, which means less harm to the environment. Of course, critics were quick to point out a key shortcoming of such a strategy, arguing that the lifespan of this equipment gets reduced to just 80–160 days, which means it must be constantly disposed of for something new.

Despite an alternative to the GPU cards, the emergence of Chia has also inevitably led to a shortage of storage devices and an increase in their prices. In China, back in April, consumers began to buy hard disc drives with a capacity of 4–18 terabytes, while SSDs were also in hot demand. In Hong Kong, the excitement instantly provoked a rise in prices for these components; depending on the model, the cost increased by $25–$75.

Fighting miners

In the wake of price increases, GPU card manufacturers began to actively fend off crypto miners back in February. Spearheading the assault, Nvidia tried to prevent mining by releasing a special driver 470.05 for its RTX 3060 cards, which are widely used for mining Ether (ETH). However, the block did not work in most cases, as miners bypassed it using cheap plugs for HDMI ports that mimic the operation of a monitor.

The unsuccessful attempt to limit the performance of GPU cards forced Nvidia to try a hardware block. At the end of May, the company announced a line of GPU cards called GeForce RTX 30 Lite Hash Rate. The GeForce RTX 30 LHR series includes video cards of the 3060, 3060 Ti, 3070 and 3080 series.

Protection against mining on these cards is implemented at the hardware level: When Ether is mined, the performance drops by half, and the overall mining efficiency decreases by more than 50%. The start of sales was scheduled for late May to early June, but the company has not yet released this product.

Nvidia’s partners have also joined the initiative by releasing GeForce RTX 30 LHR cards under their own brands, and Zotac was among the first. These cards are distinguished with a new marking so that buyers can differentiate the cards when buying one. Anti-mining cards have letters “GE” or “G” in the name, for example, Zotac RTX 3060-12GD6 Destroyer GE Pro.

Moreover, at the end of May, PC manufacturer Asus registered the v2 series GPU card with the Eurasian Economic Commission. Most likely, this is how the company labels the LHR models, which have hardware and software protection against Ether mining.

It is noteworthy that AMD, the only big competitor to Nvidia in the GPU cards market, has not yet reacted in any way to the attempts of its competitors to return the prices of gaming cards to their previous values. The company has announced no plans to release special anti-mining modifications of its accelerators. Meanwhile, the company said that it would not limit the computing power for mining cryptocurrency so that users can determine what to use the computing power of the GPU for.

Double game

Having deprived crypto miners of using gaming cards, Nvidia simultaneously offered miners an alternative in the form of a series of CMP HX accelerators. These products are focused specifically on mining, which is expressed in the presence of a special crypto mining processor (CMP) and the complete absence of external interfaces. In other words, it’s simply impossible to connect a monitor to them — thus, it can’t be used for gaming.

Asus CMP 40HX will be able to provide mining efficiency of up to 43.77 megahashes per second, while the official number announced by Nvidia stands at 36 MH/s. The 21% higher hash rate is due to memory and power consumption optimization of the video card.

It was assumed that a specialized mining card CMP 40HX would go on sale before the end of the first quarter of this year. Like all other models of specialized video cards of the CMP HX series, they will be distributed by NVIDIA partners. Asus was the first to announce possible prices for such cards: CMP 40HX could cost $699 and the younger model, CMP 30HX, whose mining efficiency is 26 MH/s, around $599.

AMD is also preparing a new GPU that will be designed for cryptocurrency mining. The cards will be based on Navi 10 and Navi 12 chips, which will be capable of mining Ether. AMD has stated that the new GPU would be released without VCN and Display Core Next DCN technologies, which will prevent them from streaming video to the display, once again, rendering them useless for gamers.

Known manufacturers of other mining equipment are not sitting on the sidelines either. Sabrent announced at the end of May the sale of PlotRipper SSDs for Chia Coin miners. The main advantage of the new SSDs is their larger capacity, which will be used gradually as the drives wear out. The PlotRipper and PlotRipper Pro models contain 4TB and 8TB NAND chips, respectively.

Is the end of crypto mining canceled?

The desire of manufacturers to separate their mining cards from gaming ones is understandable, especially when the company is experiencing problems with resources for the production and tarnishes its image in the process.

But in any production, the main thing is demand, which generates income. At the end of the first quarter of 2021, Nvidia made $155 million in revenue from the sales of GPUs designed specifically for cryptocurrency mining. In the second quarter of the fiscal year, it expects to generate $400 million.

Related: Top crypto mining hardware to expect in 2021

AMD also released its first-quarter report showing impressive revenue growth, recording a 93% rise to $3.45 billion over the same period last year. The management explained this dynamic by the surge in demand for consumer Ryzen processors and Radeon graphics cards. The average selling price has been rising in both the CPU and graphics segment. In fact, the revenue from the sales of client processors and their average price have reached record levels.

Thus, if companies continue to make such profits, in which cryptocurrency mining plays an important role, then it is likely that chip manufacturers would be willing to cater to all avenues of customers with specialized products. It may actually be that mining is not only alive and well but, in the face of a sharp drop in crypto prices, may actually come out stronger as the result.

SEC sues Nova Labs over alleged unregistered crypto securities offerings

Nvidia’s new RTX 3070 and 3080 Ti cards attempt to cater to gamers and miners

Nvidia’s RTX 3070 and 3080 Ti models will go on sale over the course of the coming month.

Nvidia’s new 3070 Ti and 3080 Ti graphics cards will launch with Ethereum hash rate limiters built in when they go on sale later this month. Nvidia announced the pending release of the new cards during its Computex 2021 livestream on Monday, where it unveiled specifications and release dates for both models.

Of particular interest to cryptocurrency enthusiasts is Nvidia’s decision to launch the cards with in-built limiters aimed at curbing their Ether-mining utility.

The company had previously pledged to create a crypto-specific card designed for mining Ether (ETH) and other GPU-compatible cryptocurrencies. The move was designed to pull demand away from would-be crypto miners, but Nvidia’s insistence on releasing all of its newer GPUs with crypto-limiters suggests this plan may not be as definitive as first expected.

Nvidia most recently declared in its Q1 earnings report that it couldn’t accurately gauge the demand coming from cryptocurrency miners. That’s despite black market prices of its 3000 range selling for up to 300% higher than retail, having accumulated millions of dollars in estimated secondary market sales already.

While the 3060, 3070 and 3080 (including its Ti models) will all feature the specially designed Lite Hash Rate (LHR) GPUs, Nvidia made no mention of the 3090 series of cards. Positioned at the higher end of Nvidia’s product range, the 3090 occupies a high enough price point that its demand by either gamers or miners is generally limited to begin with.

What’s more, a comparison of the 3080 Ti and the 3090 reveals the former to be much the same as the latter. The only difference is that the 3090 packs 24GB of video RAM compared to the 3080’s 12GB.

Regardless of Nvidia’s actions in the near future, its supply conundrum as it relates to Ether miners will likely dissipate over the course of the next 6–12 months, as Ethereum moves away from its proof-of-work consensus algorithm toward proof-of-stake. At this point, graphics cards will become irrelevant in regards to the production of ETH coins. While this would appear to detract from the value of the cards in the long run, the short-time frame left in which to profit from ETH mining will likely result in another spike in demand, and a subsequent supply shortfall.

SEC sues Nova Labs over alleged unregistered crypto securities offerings

Nvidia Makes $155 Million From Crypto Mining Chips in Fiscal Q1

Nvidia Makes 5 Million From Crypto Mining Chips in Fiscal Q1Graphics cards manufacturer Nvidia has earned $155 million in revenue from chips designed for cryptocurrency mining during the first fiscal quarter. The company admitted that crypto miners have also pushed sales up in the gaming products segment which remains its main market. Leading GPU Maker Reports Record High Video Card Sales Supported by Crypto Miners […]

SEC sues Nova Labs over alleged unregistered crypto securities offerings

Nvidia extends limits on crypto mining to newest gaming graphics cards

The global head of GeForce marketing at Nvidia said that the reduced hash rate "only applies to newly manufactured cards," not to GPUs already purchased.

Graphics card giant Nvidia said that the hash rate limiter on its RTX 3060 graphics cards would also be introduced in other RTX 30 series GPUs in an attempt to disincentivize crypto miners.

In an announcement from Nvidia today, the company said it would be applying a reduced Ether (ETH) hash rate to its newly manufactured GeForce RTX 3080, RTX 3070 and RTX 3060 Ti graphics cards. The models will be identified by a “Lite Hash Rate,” or LHR, label, aimed at getting its graphics processing units, or GPUs, to its target customers rather than cryptocurrency miners.

“This reduced hash rate only applies to newly manufactured cards with the LHR identifier and not to cards already purchased,” said Nvidia’s global head of GeForce marketing Matt Wuebbling. “We believe this additional step will get more GeForce cards at better prices into the hands of gamers everywhere.”

Nvidia limited the hash rate on some of its earlier GPU models, announcing in February that the changes reduced mining performance by 50%. However, in March a driver update from the graphics card manufacturer inadvertently removed the limiter, allowing some crypto miners to achieve a hash rate of 118.9 megahashes per second for mining tokens using Nvidia’s RTX 3060 series.

Many users responding to the news on computer news site VideoCardz seemed to believe that the expanded hash rate limits would reduce the incentive for Nvidia buyers to immediately resell their GPUs to crypto miners for a profit.

"The price a miner would pay for these cards should now also drop slightly more in half too," said VideoCardz user manicdan. "If the typical eBay price was $2000 [for example], the new one should be closer to $1000. This might be way over the original price of a $500-$600, but hopefully also reduces the desire for scalpers to try so hard and maybe more get into gamers hands at the store rather than on eBay since scalpers need to sell a card for a sizable profit to cover the eBay fee, their time, and taxes."

User Prince FA added:

"Miners won't be enticed to pay the insane current prices for half the profitability."

The company will start shipping the new RTX 3080, RTX 3070 and RTX 3060 Ti graphics cards in late May, with the LHR label in retail product listings and on the box.

SEC sues Nova Labs over alleged unregistered crypto securities offerings

Nvidia again limiting crypto mining on its RTX-3060 gaming graphics card

After accidentally unlocking its own hash rate limiter in a driver update, Nvidia has announced it will lock new cards again by reducing the mining capacity by 50%.

Graphics card giant Nvidia is quietly reintroducing a hash rate limiter on its RTX 3060 series graphics cards in an effort to disincentivize cryptocurrency miners.

On April 29 the company issued the GeForce 466.27 driver that reintroduces RTX 3060 cryptomining limiter.

GeForce 466.27 driver release notes, Source: Nvidia

According to sources reported by computer news site Videocardz, Nvidia will release the new ‘Lite Hash Rate’ models in mid-May which will be almost identical to previous versions of the same cards.

The gaming giant had originally limited the hash on the previous models, reducing mining performance by 50%. Matt Wuebbling, head of global GeForce marketing at Nvidia, said in a blog post in February:

“We designed GeForce GPUs for gamers, and gamers are clamoring for more.”

Hackers first came up with a workaround, and then in March, a driver update inadvertently unlocked this 'limiter' unleashing the card’s true potential of 118 Mh/s, enabling the mining of Ethereum and other cryptocurrencies.

The new cards are said to be identical in every way except that they will have a new PCI Device ID of 2504. Although the unlocked driver is now in the public’s hands, the new ID is designed to render them useless if used with the 470.05 driver update. It is however virtually certain some miners will attempt to circumvent this, and the previous models were supposedly hard-locked via the BIOS.

GeForce RTX 3060 new PCI Device ID in 466.27 drivers. Source: VideoCardz

The news has received a mixed response among the gaming community. Videocardz forum user “Eric W,” stated that the move only seems to sideline small home miners, who are often gamers t:

“Well this is a mixed bag. I want to buy a new gpu for gaming, but I also mine when I'm not actively playing games... I can't buy a mining gpu because Nvidia seems to only sell them in quantities of several thousand and I have no interest in having 100s of mining rigs.”

User “Mark” suggested the limiter wouldn’t put miners off anyway, adding that “it needs to be 90%+” to “be a real deterrent to miners”  while "Mashed Potato" believes it’s just a money grab:

“They still want miners to buy their cards… but twice as much.”

According to VideoCardz, limits are expected to be set on most RTX 30 series cards, although certain models, like the RTX 3090, may not end up with a limiter due to its high price tag of $1,500.

SEC sues Nova Labs over alleged unregistered crypto securities offerings

Leaked Nvidia RTX 3080 Ti GPU shown mining Ether at 118 Mh/s

Leaked screenshots of the latest Nvidia GPU mining Ether at full power leaves gamers worried and miners rubbing their hands.

Nvidia’s RTX 30 series of graphics cards have been subject to unending speculation, rumors and even ridicule since the firm first announced it would ship its latest GPU’s with a built-in Ether (ETH) mining limiter.

A series of missteps saw the mining limiter on Nvidia’s RTX 3060 card first undone by crafty hackers and then completely removed by one of Nvidia’s own driver updates.

The latest in a series of leaks now suggests Nvidia’s next major GPU release — the RTX 3080 Ti — could be shipped without a cryptocurrency mining limiter at all. Leaked screenshots first uncovered by VideoCardz.com show the 3080 Ti mining Ether with a hash rate of 118.9 megahashes per second — that’s more than quadruple what the hamstrung cards were originally supposed to be capable of.

It’s worth noting that there has been no confirmation that the GPU in the screenshots is the same one that Nvidia is prepping for release. The leaked model could be a model still around from before the company decided to implement its mining limiters. 

Also, Nvidia’s previous missteps in releasing its anti-crypto cards have led to the company considering a complete overhaul of its 30 series range, so the performance of the card in question may not necessarily be representative of the one that is expected to hit shelves in May.

With a prospective hash rate of 118.9 MH/s, the RTX 3080 Ti stands to be a very profitable card for Ether miners, even in Western nations.

China’s average electricity costs round out at $0.08 per kilowatt-hour per household, meaning the GPU would stand to return profits of around $378 per month, or $4,611 per year.

In the United States, where electricity averages at around $0.13/kWh per household, the card would still return healthy profits of $4,488 per year, or just over 2 ETH based on current prices. The GPU is expected to cost around $999 upon release, however, another mad rush by cryptocurrency miners could see demand outstrip supply once more, again resulting in a higher price.

SEC sues Nova Labs over alleged unregistered crypto securities offerings