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Crypto Miner Core Scientific Cuts 10% of Staff, Keeps Hashrate Projection - ONEnews

Friday, August 12, 2022 | August 12, 2022 WIB Last Updated 2022-08-11T23:32:14Z

 


The company also took a $840 million accounting charge to write down the value of its assets.

Crypto miner Core Scientific (CORZ) cut 10% of its staff and dramatically reduced the value of its assets as the cryptocurrency rout continued to drag on the industry.

The workforce reduction was announced Thursday as the company reported its second-quarter financial results, which included an $840 million charge to reduce the accounting value of its assets that took the Core's net loss for the period to $862 million.

CFO Denise Sterling said during the earning conference call that the staff cuts were "surgical" and didn't affect operational personnel in Core Scientific's data centers.

Like other bitcoin miners amid the crypto winter, the company has been forced to shore up its liquidity. In July, Core sold more bitcoin than it mined, in part to keep up with costs.

However, Core stuck with its forecast for the company's hashrate, a measure of computing power on the Bitcoin network and a key metric for mining companies. On May 12, Core Scientific lowered its 2022 hashrate projection to 30-32 exahash per second and total power of about 1 gigawatt, citing market turmoil. The company retained that forecast Thursday.

CEO Mike Levitt said during the earnings call that two-thirds of the company's 2022 growth is set to take place in the second half of the year.

The miner reported $164 million in revenue, narrowly beating the average analyst estimate of $161.8 million, according to FactSet data. Revenue more than doubled from a year earlier, driven by "increases in digital asset mining revenue and hosting revenue, partially offset by a decrease in equipment sales," the earnings report said.

CEO Mike Levitt said during the earnings call that two-thirds of the company's 2022 growth is set to take place in the second half of the year.

But the miner's personnel and facilities costs have also climbed by 25% compared to last year, while their power cost has reached $0.05-$0.055 per kilowatt hour.

Answering several questions from concerned analysts about the company raised its power-cost expectations for the year, Levitt pointed to the company's Georgia facility, where Core faces the greatest exposure to rising natural gas prices. The miner is trying to get a better arrangement with its energy provider, the CEO said. The miner is also thinking about scaling up its operations such that economies of scale bring down unit costs.


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