The company paid off most of its long-term debt by selling down its bitcoin treasury, as it moves ahead with its new focus on modular high-performance computing for AI clients

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Key Takeaways:

  • Cango paid off most of its long-term debt and sold most of its bitcoin holdings in the first quarter, dramatically reducing its assets and liabilities
  • Following the balance sheet cleanup, the company is moving ahead with a pilot project offering high-performance computing services for small- and medium-size businesses

What do you do after a major storm passes? If your name is Cango Inc. (NYSE:CANG), the answer is that you engage in some serious housecleaning. That was the big story in Cango's first-quarter financial report, released on Sunday, which was a sort of "Part Two" of a stormy tale that dominated its report from the previous quarter.

The company spent much of its life as a China-based car specialist, before sharply shifting gears at the end of 2024 to focus on bitcoin mining. That was fine for about a year, as bitcoin soared to record highs and Cango built up a huge treasury of the cryptocurrency. But then bitcoin crashed starting last October, prompting Cango to accelerate a previously announced shift into the operation of high-performance computing (HPC) centers that can be used to host power-hungry AI applications.

The storm around Cango crested at the start of this year, when it abruptly sold down more than half of its bitcoin holdings and used the cash to shore up its balance sheet. Now, the company's latest report for the three months to March shows it has continued to sell down its bitcoin holdings. It also continues to accelerate its drive into HPC centers, which share many qualities with both bitcoin mining centers and more conventional data centers.

In that process, the company has cleaned up its balance sheet considerably, ending the first quarter with just $30.6 million in long-term debt, down dramatically from $557.6 million just three months earlier, according to its latest report. The company's cash also shrank to just $7.2 million from $41.2 million over that time, though Cango used proceeds from its own bitcoin sales to pay down most of its debt.

After initially adhering to a "mine and hold" strategy, Cango abruptly started selling down its bitcoin holdings in February after the price of the cryptocurrency fell by about half between last October and this February. The drop was especially painful for miners, because it suddenly made the cost of minting each bitcoin more expensive than the actual value of the currency – meaning they were losing money on every coin they produced.

Cango had 7,474.6 bitcoins in its treasury at the end of January, but then suddenly sold more than half of those over two days in February, leaving it with just 3,313.4 by the end of that month. It continued to sell down its holdings, bringing its reserve to just 1,026 bitcoins by the end of March. All the while, it has continued to keep mining new bitcoins, though at a slower rate as it retires older, less efficient mining machines.

The bottom line in Cango's latest housecleaning story is that the company is on much sounder financial footing than it was at the start of this year. But it has also shrunk considerably as it sold off the bitcoins that were its key asset and paid down the debt that was weighing down its balance sheet. At the end of March, the company's total assets had shrunk to $381 million, down by roughly two-thirds from $1.13 billion three months earlier. But its net liabilities also dropped dramatically to just $170 million from a previous $736 million over that period.

Starting from scratch

With its balance sheet now much healthier, Cango is setting its sights on developing its HPC business, targeting small- and medium businesses developing and operating their own AI applications. Such demand is likely to grow rapidly in the years ahead, as the focus for AI moves from power-hungry large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT to more company- and industry-specific agentic applications that require less computing and power resources.

Cango is aiming to convert many of its existing bitcoin mining facilities spread across 40 sites on three continents into a new generation of HPC centers. It is starting by converting its most promising nodes, with an eventual aim of building an extensive flexible, modular solution that can be used by a wide range of miners, as well as small- to medium-sized enterprise customers requiring HPC services for AI and other computing-intensive applications.

To accomplish that transformation, the company set up EcoHash, based in the U.S. state of Texas, earlier this year and recruited a senior technology executive from virtual meetings giant Zoom Communications to lead the technical development. On its latest earnings call, the company said it is currently retrofitting a mining center it owns in the U.S. state of Georgia, which will become a pilot for its modular, high-density computing model.

"Our objective with this modular design is to evaluate whether modular deployment can reduce cost and improve operational efficiency relative to traditional data center infrastructure," CEO Paul Yu said on the call. "By leveraging our global energy network and operational expertise, we are well-positioned to enhance efficiency, capture emerging AI compute opportunities, and drive sustainable long-term value."

At the same time, Cango isn't giving up on its bitcoin mining operation, but instead is refining it to run more efficiently. A big part of that involves selling off some of its older S19 miners and replacing them with newer, more cost-effective S21 machines. As that happens, the company's ratio of S19-to-S21 models stood at 8:2 by the end of May, improving its cost structure.

Most of the company's $102 million in first-quarter revenue came from its bitcoin mining operation, which minted 1,266 bitcoins during the quarter, averaging 422 per month. The company minted another 230.04 bitcoins in April, showing its production has stabilized as it operates at a hash rate of about 37 EH/s. As it focuses on efficiency, its average cash cost per bitcoin mined fell 9% quarter-on-quarter to $76,928 in the first quarter, which is still slightly higher than the current market price for bitcoins.

On its bottom line, Cango reported a $261.1 million loss from continuing operations during the first quarter, marking a slight improvement from a $285 million loss in the previous quarter at the height of its storm. Much of the losses came from non-cash charges, most notably a $151.8 million loss from changes in fair value of receivable for its bitcoin collateral, as well as a $49 million impairment loss related to its mining machines.

At the end of the day, Cango has emerged from its storm and subsequent housecleaning as a smaller but much leaner company with relatively little debt and a sizable cash-generating engine from its bitcoin operations. Now, it needs to quickly move ahead with its HPC initiative to draw investors back to its stock, which has taken a beating since the bitcoin downturn began.

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Benzinga Disclaimer: This article is from an unpaid external contributor. It does not represent Benzinga’s reporting and has not been edited for content or accuracy.