Home news Bitcoin miner Core Scientific reports $805 million net loss in Q2

Bitcoin miner Core Scientific reports $805 million net loss in Q2

by Daniel Kuhn

U.S. publicly-traded miner Core Scientific reported a net loss of $804.9 million in the second quarter of 2024, compared to a net loss of $9.3 million for the same period in the prior year. 

According to its latest financial report filed Wednesday, these staggering losses were primarily driven by mandatory $796 million “non-cash mark-to-market adjustments” to its warrants and contingent value rights due to its rising stock price. Core Scientific issued these over-the-counter traded CVRs to debt holders during its Chapter 11 process in 2024.

It mined 1,680 bitcoin (~$92 million) during the quarter—a significant decrease from previous quarters due to the halving and increased competition—at an average cost of $29,900 per coin.

“We are pleased with the company's performance, especially in light of the halving and 68% increase in the hashrate,” Chief Financial Officer Denise Sterling said Wednesday on the earnings call. 

Operating expenses increased by $4.3 million while operating income decreased to $6.6 million from $9.5 million compared to the second quarter of 2023. 

However, the firm's revenue increased to $141.1 million, up from $126.9 million in Q2 of 2023. The mandatory conversion of its warrants and CRVs removed $260 million in debt from its balance sheet. CEO Adam Sullivan noted the company's total debt has dropped by about 60% since the start of the year. 

Core's stock (ticker CORZ) rose 1.13% to $9.82 following the earnings release.

Core Scientific is undergoing a strategy shift in the post-halving world. The firm is aggressively building out its infrastructure, including expanding its Denton, Texas, center to approximately 830 megawatts. Additionally, it signed an agreement to purchase and deploy next-generation chips from 's Block (formerly Square).

The company is also hedging the growing risks of bitcoin mining by expanding its high-performance computing business. On Tuesday, it announced that it expanded its deal to supply computing power to AI firm CoreWeave.

“We're building a portfolio that is attractive to these end clients,” Sullivan said on the earnings call, noting it is looking to diversify its client base. “We have a great story right now. We're on the leading edge of both bitcoin mining and HPC — two of the highest growth industries.” 


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