A publicly listed Bitcoin (BTC) miner from Wall Street, BitFuFu Inc. (NASDAQ: FUFU), has reported a significant increase in crypto mining costs and a sharp decline in net income for the second quarter of 2024, despite strong revenue growth.
Bitcoin Miner BitFuFu Reports Surging Costs, Lower Profits in Q2
The company's cost to mine one Bitcoin from self-mining operations soared to $51,887 in Q2 2024, up from $19,344 in the same period last year. This 168% increase in mining costs comes as the cryptocurrency industry grapples with higher energy prices and increased mining difficulty following the Bitcoin halving event in April.
Despite a 69.7% year-over-year (YoY) increase in total revenue to $129.4 million, BitFuFu's net income fell to $1.3 million in Q2 2024, compared to $5.1 million in the same quarter of 2023. The company attributed this decline partly to a non-cash unrealized fair value loss of $16.4 million on its Bitcoin holdings.
However, Calla Zhao, BitFuFu's Chief Financial Officer, claims that the company maintained a healthy balance sheet with a net cash position of $52.5 million, “which provides a solid foundation to execute on our growth strategy.”
The company's Bitcoin production from self-mining operations decreased by 23.1% to 780 BTCs in Q2 2024, down from 1,014 BTCs in the same period last year. This decline was primarily due to the increase in blockchain difficulty for Bitcoin mining and the impact of the halving event.
Recently, two other mining companies also published their financial data for Q2 2024. In their case, however, the struggle with the negative effects of the halving appears to be more successful. HIVE Digital increased its revenue by 37% and TeraWulf by 130%.
Net profits also rose, as both companies have decided to move towards supporting AI and high-performance computing. According to VanEck analysis, an increasing number of companies in the industry are doing this, eyeing a $38 billion opportunity.
Cloud-Mining Operations Up
Despite these challenges, BitFuFu reported strong growth in its cloud-mining business, with registered users increasing 86.8% YoY to 395,056.
“We saw a substantial increase in our cloud-mining registered user base, surpassing 395,000 users as of June 30,” commented Leo Lu, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of BitFuFu. “This represents an 87% increase year-over-year and a 23% rise sequentially from the first quarter of 2024.”
🌟 $FUFU's Q2 2024 Milestones! 📊
— BitFuFu (@BitFuFuOfficial) August 20, 2024
Our hosting capacity jumped 39.6% YoY to 522 MW, and #mining capacity soared 62.5% YoY to 24.7 EH/s. With 395,056 users (+86.8% YoY) and revenue up 69.7% YoY to $129.4M, we're leading the #BTC market!
Details here! https://t.co/oig3qAY44x pic.twitter.com/xIy0U4SRl1
And although the number of Bitcoins produced by clients using the cloud-mining service also declined, reaching 1,272 BTC compared to 1,797 BTC in the same period the previous year, it did not harm the overall revenue structure. Revenue from cloud-mining solutions rose 66.8% to $77.0 million, accounting for 59.5% of total revenue.
“Cloud-mining revenue contributed approximately 60% of BitFuFu’s second-quarter revenue. Our cloud-mining business enables us to effectively lock in the price of Bitcoin, serving as a hedge against Bitcoin price volatility ,” Lu added.
BitFuFu has been listed on Wall Street only since this year, executing plans announced back in 2022. Although it is not among the top 5 miners on Nasdaq with a capitalization of 700 million dollars (falling about $1 billion short of the fifth, Core Scientific), the company's actions are definitely attracting investor attention.