Share this article

Riot Blockchain Mined 227 Bitcoin in Q2

Riot reported a current mining capacity of 556 petahash per second.

Updated Sep 14, 2021, 9:42 a.m. Published Aug 11, 2020, 12:51 p.m. 1 min read
A crypto mining farm.

Castle Rock, Colo.-based cryptocurrency miner Riot Blockchain reported earnings for the June quarter Monday, noting a decrease in mining revenue from a year ago.

  • The company mined 227 bitcoins in the second quarter of 2020, down 28% from 2019 when Riot reported 316.19 mined bitcoins. In 2019, Riot switched to mining bitcoin exclusively, said Jeff McGonegal, CEO of Riot Blockchain. Previously, the company also mined litecoin and bitcoin cash.
  • Quarterly mining revenue from mining was $1.9 million, down nearly 20% from a year ago when the company reported $2.4 million in quarterly mining revenue.
  • "We're strong believers in the macroeconomic fundamentals underlying bitcoin," McGonegal said in email correspondence with CoinDesk.
  • Riot reported a current mining capacity of 357 petahash per second, up more than 250% from 101 petahash per second last year.
  • Despite an increase in mined bitcoin and the cryptocurrency’s more-than-200% rally from March lows, Riot’s cash and cryptocurrency corporate liquidity dropped from $18 million last year to $16.4 during the June 2020 quarter.
  • Riot shares were trading hands at $4.12 at Monday's close, down 3% from the daily open. They've risen 40% since August 1.

Update (August 11, 19:56 UTC): This article has been updated to reflect 227 bitcoins mined in the Q2, not 508 as was previously reported. Current mining capacity was also updated to 357 petahash per second instead of 556.

More For You

ETFs (Markus Winkler/Pixabay, modified by CoinDesk)

IBIT recorded its second-biggest single-day net outflow since launch on Wednesday, missing a January record by less than half a million dollars, as the Iran-driven sell-off pulled institutional money out of bitcoin.

What to know:

  • BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust saw $527.84 million in net outflows on Wednesday, its second-largest single-day withdrawal since launching in January and just shy of its record.
  • The 11 U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs together lost $733.43 million that day, extending a multi-session streak of outflows that has pulled more than $2...