Bitcoin Miner Hut 8 Talks Operational Issues and USBTC Merger in Earnings Call - Coinleaks
Current Date:September 21, 2024

Bitcoin Miner Hut 8 Talks Operational Issues and USBTC Merger in Earnings Call

Operational issues across its bitcoin mining sites are weighing on Hut 8 Mining (HUT) as it tries to complete what would be one of the largest deals in the sector – the company’s merger with U.S. Bitcoin Corp.

In mid-November, Hut 8 stopped mining with 7,000 rigs at a site in North Bay, Ontario due to ongoing litigation with its energy provider, Validus Power. Hut 8 has now removed all machines from the facility to a site in Medicine Hat, Alberta. Pressed about progress by analysts on the company’s earnings call Thursday morning, Hut 8 CEO Jaime Leverton said the firm is assessing opportunities to energize the miners but didn’t give any concrete alternatives.

At its Drumheller site in Alberta, Hut 8 has been facing “electrical issues” which have hit operations. “We are in the early stages exploring supplementary options to mitigate the challenges and hope we have more definitive plan,” said the firm’s newly-appointed Chief Financial Officer Shenif Visram on the call.

Hut 8 shares are down 8% on Thursday, falling alongside mining peers as bitcoin slides to its lowest level in a month at $21,450.

Hut 8 did receive a letter of no action from the Canadian competition authority for its merger with U.S. Bitcoin Corp., meaning the authority doesn’t plan to challenge the move, Leverton said on the call. The company’s main focus is on completing the merger, she said, which will give it access to additional power for mining rigs.

Looking at Q4 results, mining profit plunged to CAD$3.33 million from $39.2 million during the same period a year earlier. For all of 2022, the company mined 3,568 bitcoin, up 28.1% from 2021. Hut 8 reported a net loss of CAD$242.8 million for 2022 compared to a loss of CAD$72.7 million for 2021.

The company earlier this week disclosed sales of bitcoin for the first time in 2021 as it looked to help fund both operating costs and its merger with U.S. Bitcoin Corp.