August 15, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
Altcoin Season Could Begin in September as Bitcoin’s Grip on Crypto Market Weakens: Coinbase Institutional Bullish Bets Lose $860M to Liquidations as ETH, BTC, XRP, DOGE Price Drop 9% XRP Sheds 7% on $437M Sell Spike as $1B Liquidations Hit Crypto Market Bitcoin charts are similar to the 2021 top: Will history rhyme? Asia Morning Briefing: ETH’s Bullrun Meets Early Signs of Selling Pressure US Treasury’s Scott Bessent backpedals: Bitcoin buying still possible South Koreans dump Tesla for Ethereum treasury BitMine: Asia Express Scott Bessent Suggests Government Bitcoin Purchases Remain a Possibility Wall Street Joins Consumer Advocates to Call for Edit to GENIUS Act on Stablecoins U.S. Blacklists Crypto Network Behind Ruble-Backed Stablecoin and Shuttered Exchange Garantex

Canaan to Exit AI Chip Business, Double Down on Bitcoin Mining Amid Realignment

Canaan Inc. (CAN), the Singapore-based manufacturer of bitcoin mining machines, will wind down its artificial intelligence (AI) semiconductor business to refocus on its core crypto operations.

Despite the growing trend of bitcoin miners diversifying their revenue through AI-related businesses, building AI chips is likely very competitive and not cost-effective for smaller companies.

Canaan said that its AI unit, which brought in just about $900,000 in revenue in 2024 (versus total revenue of $88.8 million) and accounted for 15% of company-wide operating expenses, failed to align with the firm’s long-term strategy, the company said on Monday.

“Doubling down on our core strengths in crypto infrastructure and bitcoin mining is the most strategic path forward,” CEO Nangeng Zhang said in the statement.

Before the move, the company said it began exploring options for the AI unit as far back as March 2022, including selling it or shutting it down entirely. Now, Canaan expects to complete the phase-out in the coming months and anticipates a sharp drop in costs once the exit is finalized.

Canaan is best known for its Avalon mining rigs, one of the earliest brands of ASIC (application-specific integrated circuit) miners built for bitcoin. The firm went public on Nasdaq in 2019 and continues to develop mining hardware while also expanding into self-mining and consumer mining products.

The decision, which comes after years of trying to diversify into edge computing chips, is hardly a surprise given the recent focus of miners and mining chip makers on “American Made” bitcoin after Trump’s U.S. election win.

Recently, Benchmark’s Mark Palmer wrote in his research that rig maker’s shares don’t reflect upside potential from the expansion of the company’s self-mining operations, especially in the United States.

Canaan’s shares were slightly down on Monday, while the broader digital assets and equities markets were mostly positive. The stock fell 71% this year, while a bitcoin mining ETF, WGMI, declined about 20%.

This post was originally published on this site

Please enter Coingecko Free Api Key to get this plugin works