Share this article

Nvidia’s Crypto Mining Chip Sales Continue to Fall Sharply

The chipmaker’s fiscal fourth-quarter revenue from its Cryptocurrency Mining Processors (CMP) tumbled 77% from the previous quarter.

Updated May 11, 2023, 6:00 p.m. Published Feb 16, 2022, 10:16 p.m.
Nvidia chip (Shutterstock)
Nvidia chip (Shutterstock)

Chipmaker Nvidia’s (NVDA) Cryptocurrency Mining Processors (CMP) revenue fell to $24 million in its fiscal fourth quarter ending Jan. 30, a 77% decline from $105 million in the previous quarter, according to its filings.

  • Nvidia announced the introduction of crypto-specific CMPs in February of last year as a way of protecting sales of its flagship GPUs for gamers.
  • In the second quarter of last year, Nvidia said its CMP unit generated revenue of $266 million.
  • The company noted on Wednesday that while its regular GPUs are capable of cryptocurrency mining, it has limited visibility into how much mining impacts its overall GPU demand.
  • Last year, Nvidia introduced hashrate limiters for its flagship GeForce GPUs to keep more products available for gamers.
  • In a recent conference hosted by a Wall Street investment bank Needham, Nvidia said that almost all of its Ampere-based products will incorporate a hashrate limiter to deter crypto miners from using those products for mining.
  • Meanwhile, Nvidia’s rival Intel (INTC) launched its own crypto mining-specific chips earlier this month, noting that mining firms Argo Blockchain (ARBK) and Griid Infrastructure, as well as Jack Dorsey-led Block (SQ), will receive the chipmaker's first mining chips later this year.
  • Nvidia’s fourth-quarter adjusted earnings per share came in at $1.32, beating the consensus analyst estimate of $1.23, according to FactSet data. Its quarterly revenue of $7.64 billion also beat estimates of $7.42 billion.
  • Nvidia’s shares were down about 1% in post-market trading on Wednesday.

More For You

More For You

The Genius Act ripple effect: Sui executives say institutional demand has never been higher

Stephen Mackintosh, chief investment officer of Sui Group Holdings, and Evan Cheng, CEO of Mysten Labs at Consensus Hong Kong 2026 (CoinDesk)

Evan Cheng and Stephen Mackintosh said 2025 marked a turning point for institutional adoption, with tokenization and agentic commerce emerging as the next frontier.

What to know:

  • Executives cited ETF flows, DAT growth and major trading firms entering crypto.
  • Tokenization and instant settlement could blur the line between traditional and decentralized markets.
  • Low-latency design and composable tooling aim to power AI-driven and tokenized financial use cases.