Bitcoin miner Riot Platforms is buying 66,560 mining rigs from manufacturer MicroBT in one of its largest expansions of hash rate in the firm’s history ahead of the Bitcoin halving scheduled for April 2024. The additional purchase agreement totaled $290.5 million, Riot stated in a Dec. 4 statement — meaning it paid an average of $4,360 for each machine.
The right-to-purchase option was included in Riot’s
initial agreement with MicroBT when it agreed to buy
33,280 machines from MicroBT in June. The two firms have
now updated this agreement to provide Riot with options to
purchase up to 265,000 additional miners from MicroBT on
the same terms as the new order.
Riot’s CEO Jason Les said the purchase order is “the
largest order of hash rate” in the company’s history and
hopes the updated agreement will strengthen Riot’s mining
performance further.
Over 48,000 or 72% of the new machines will be MicroBT’s
latest model, the M66S, which has a hash rate of 250
terahashes per second (TH/s), while the remaining machines
will consist of the M66 (14,770) and M56S++ (3,720)
models, Riot noted.
Altogether, the 66,560 miners will add 18 exahashes per
second (EH/s) to Riot’s operations.
Riot said the first 33,280 miners bought in June will
start to deploy in the first quarter of 2024, while the
newest stack of 66,560 miners will deploy in the second
half of 2024.
The firm estimates its self-mining hash rate capacity to
reach 38 EH/s once the 99,840 rigs are fully installed and
operating, which the first expects in the second half of
2025.
The firm previously cited the upcoming Bitcoin halving
event — scheduled for April 2024 — as one of the main
reasons behind its recent buying spree.
Riot’s stock increased nearly 9% on Dec. 4, according to
Google Finance. It is now up over 345% so far in 2023.
Bitcoin miners increase production; Hut 8 Corp begins trading
Bitcoin miner CleanSpark produced 666 BTC in November, up
5.2% from the 633 BTC it produced in October and 24% from
November 2022.
CleanSpark CEO Zach Bradford said the firm saw a
“significant increase” in production from fees, which he
said is likely due to rising interest in Ordinals.
“This trend suggests that fees might soon become a larger
source of revenue as bitcoin’s use cases grow and adoption
increases,” Bradford added.
Meanwhile, Nasdaq-listed TeraWulf said it mined 323 BTC in November, up 3% from its October production. The firm said much of this was driven by higher network transaction fees but didn’t mention the impact of Ordinals.