Cango's Grand Plan: From Bitcoin Mining to AI Infrastructure Powerhouse

MarketDash Editorial Team
4 days ago
After a turbulent first year as a bitcoin miner, Cango is already looking past crypto toward building a global network of AI computing centers. But with bitcoin prices falling and mining costs rising, the company's timing on its next pivot will be crucial.

One year ago, Cango Inc. (CANG) decided it was done selling cars in China and jumped headfirst into bitcoin mining. Now, after a year of learning just how brutal the cryptocurrency business can be, the company is already plotting its next transformation into something it hopes will be far more stable: an operator of high-performance computing centers for artificial intelligence applications.

It's an ambitious vision, and one that could position Cango at the center of what many believe will be critical infrastructure for the AI boom. But first, the company has to navigate the choppy waters of its current business, where bitcoin prices have dropped sharply from their 2025 highs and mining profitability is getting squeezed from all sides.

Strong Quarter Meets Uncertain Future

Cango's third-quarter results, released Monday, showed the company firing on all cylinders during the period ending in September. Revenue jumped to $224.6 million from $141 million the previous quarter, a 60.6% gain that reflected both new mining capacity coming online and bitcoin prices that were still riding high. The company swung back to profitability with $37.3 million in net income after two quarters of losses.

But if you were listening to the earnings call, you know everyone was really focused on what's happening right now in the final quarter of the year. Bitcoin has tumbled from its early October peaks, and suddenly the math on mining profitability looks a lot less comfortable. In the third quarter, Cango spent an average of $81,072 to mine each bitcoin, excluding depreciation costs. With bitcoin currently trading around $87,000, that doesn't leave much margin for error. Factor in the depreciation of those expensive mining machines, and the economics get even tighter.

This is exactly the kind of volatility that makes the bitcoin mining business so challenging. The company knows it, which is why executives spent significant time on the call explaining their longer-term roadmap beyond crypto.

The Three-Phase Transformation

CEO Paul Yu laid out how Cango sees its evolution playing out. "We view bitcoin mining as the practical on-ramp toward our energy and compute ambitions, following the sequence of 'from bitcoin mining to energy access, and from operational depth to AI compute deployment,'" he said in the earnings report.

The plan has three distinct phases, each moving the company further away from crypto volatility. In the near term, Cango will start downplaying bitcoin mining and focus on entering the GPU computing power leasing market, serving compute platforms and AI startups. Think of it as renting out processing power the way you'd rent cloud storage.

The medium-term phase gets more interesting. Cango plans to build out infrastructure for regional AI computing networks, including purchasing and constructing data centers with their own power supplies. The company has already dipped its toes in these waters, buying a data center in Georgia back in August. It's also running green energy pilot projects in Oman and Indonesia, testing different approaches to the power-hungry business of running computing centers.

But the real moonshot is the long-term vision: creating what Cango calls "a global, distributed AI compute grid powered by green energy, integrating multiple hubs and edge nodes for seamless, scalable capacity." Instead of building massive centralized data centers, Yu explained on the call that Cango will focus on "distributed compute units" that can "integrate dispersed GPU resources into standardized compute pools and break them into smaller units tailored to the needs of small and midsized enterprises."

The end goal is to become a utility-like provider of AI computing for multinationals and large-scale AI applications, locking in multi-year contracts that provide the kind of stable, predictable revenue that bitcoin mining definitely does not.

The Bitcoin Business Gets Tougher

While Cango plots its AI future, its present reality is getting more challenging by the month. The company started with 32 exahashes per second (EH/s) of mining capacity when it entered the business last November. It added another 18 EH/s in July, bringing total capacity to 50 EH/s and causing a nice jump in bitcoin output to 650.5 units that month, up 45% from June's 450 units.

But here's the thing about bitcoin mining: you're competing with everyone else for a fixed supply of new coins. As more miners join the network with more powerful equipment, each participant's share of the pie shrinks. Cango's monthly output has been declining since July, falling to 602.6 units in October despite the company now operating at more than 90% of its total capacity.

The company has worked hard to squeeze more efficiency out of its operations, tweaking facility footprints and upgrading older machines. These efforts pushed the utilization rate from 40.91 EH/s in July to 46.09 EH/s in October. But even with these improvements, the fundamental economics remain challenging when bitcoin prices fall.

A Symbolic Fresh Start

Cango used the latest earnings release to make some symbolic changes that underscore its evolution. The company now reports results in U.S. dollars instead of Chinese yuan, and converted its New York listing to trade ordinary shares instead of the American depositary receipts commonly used by Chinese companies. ADRs are often criticized for providing less transparency, so the switch to ordinary shares sends a signal about Cango's commitment to operating more like a standard U.S.-listed company.

These changes make sense for a company that's moving away from its Shanghai roots in the Chinese car services business and repositioning itself as a global technology infrastructure player.

Following the Right Role Model

The stock market's reaction to Cango's journey has been mixed. Shares soared initially after the bitcoin pivot announcement and continued climbing as cryptocurrency prices rallied. But they've dropped about 30% this year, closely tracking bitcoin's recent downturn. Fellow miner Mara (MARA) shows a similar pattern, down 31% for the year.

Perhaps the better comparison for Cango's future isn't a bitcoin miner at all. GDS (GDS), one of China's leading independent data center operators, has seen its stock surge 47% this year on investor enthusiasm about high-performance computing infrastructure for AI applications. That's the kind of company Cango hopes to become, and it's a trajectory that could matter a lot more than bitcoin's daily price swings.

The question is whether Cango can successfully navigate yet another transformation while keeping the lights on in its current business. Bitcoin mining was supposed to be more stable than selling cars in a weak Chinese market. Now it turns out AI infrastructure might be more stable than bitcoin mining. At least this time, Cango is thinking several steps ahead rather than just looking for the nearest exit from a struggling business.

Cango's Grand Plan: From Bitcoin Mining to AI Infrastructure Powerhouse

MarketDash Editorial Team
4 days ago
After a turbulent first year as a bitcoin miner, Cango is already looking past crypto toward building a global network of AI computing centers. But with bitcoin prices falling and mining costs rising, the company's timing on its next pivot will be crucial.

One year ago, Cango Inc. (CANG) decided it was done selling cars in China and jumped headfirst into bitcoin mining. Now, after a year of learning just how brutal the cryptocurrency business can be, the company is already plotting its next transformation into something it hopes will be far more stable: an operator of high-performance computing centers for artificial intelligence applications.

It's an ambitious vision, and one that could position Cango at the center of what many believe will be critical infrastructure for the AI boom. But first, the company has to navigate the choppy waters of its current business, where bitcoin prices have dropped sharply from their 2025 highs and mining profitability is getting squeezed from all sides.

Strong Quarter Meets Uncertain Future

Cango's third-quarter results, released Monday, showed the company firing on all cylinders during the period ending in September. Revenue jumped to $224.6 million from $141 million the previous quarter, a 60.6% gain that reflected both new mining capacity coming online and bitcoin prices that were still riding high. The company swung back to profitability with $37.3 million in net income after two quarters of losses.

But if you were listening to the earnings call, you know everyone was really focused on what's happening right now in the final quarter of the year. Bitcoin has tumbled from its early October peaks, and suddenly the math on mining profitability looks a lot less comfortable. In the third quarter, Cango spent an average of $81,072 to mine each bitcoin, excluding depreciation costs. With bitcoin currently trading around $87,000, that doesn't leave much margin for error. Factor in the depreciation of those expensive mining machines, and the economics get even tighter.

This is exactly the kind of volatility that makes the bitcoin mining business so challenging. The company knows it, which is why executives spent significant time on the call explaining their longer-term roadmap beyond crypto.

The Three-Phase Transformation

CEO Paul Yu laid out how Cango sees its evolution playing out. "We view bitcoin mining as the practical on-ramp toward our energy and compute ambitions, following the sequence of 'from bitcoin mining to energy access, and from operational depth to AI compute deployment,'" he said in the earnings report.

The plan has three distinct phases, each moving the company further away from crypto volatility. In the near term, Cango will start downplaying bitcoin mining and focus on entering the GPU computing power leasing market, serving compute platforms and AI startups. Think of it as renting out processing power the way you'd rent cloud storage.

The medium-term phase gets more interesting. Cango plans to build out infrastructure for regional AI computing networks, including purchasing and constructing data centers with their own power supplies. The company has already dipped its toes in these waters, buying a data center in Georgia back in August. It's also running green energy pilot projects in Oman and Indonesia, testing different approaches to the power-hungry business of running computing centers.

But the real moonshot is the long-term vision: creating what Cango calls "a global, distributed AI compute grid powered by green energy, integrating multiple hubs and edge nodes for seamless, scalable capacity." Instead of building massive centralized data centers, Yu explained on the call that Cango will focus on "distributed compute units" that can "integrate dispersed GPU resources into standardized compute pools and break them into smaller units tailored to the needs of small and midsized enterprises."

The end goal is to become a utility-like provider of AI computing for multinationals and large-scale AI applications, locking in multi-year contracts that provide the kind of stable, predictable revenue that bitcoin mining definitely does not.

The Bitcoin Business Gets Tougher

While Cango plots its AI future, its present reality is getting more challenging by the month. The company started with 32 exahashes per second (EH/s) of mining capacity when it entered the business last November. It added another 18 EH/s in July, bringing total capacity to 50 EH/s and causing a nice jump in bitcoin output to 650.5 units that month, up 45% from June's 450 units.

But here's the thing about bitcoin mining: you're competing with everyone else for a fixed supply of new coins. As more miners join the network with more powerful equipment, each participant's share of the pie shrinks. Cango's monthly output has been declining since July, falling to 602.6 units in October despite the company now operating at more than 90% of its total capacity.

The company has worked hard to squeeze more efficiency out of its operations, tweaking facility footprints and upgrading older machines. These efforts pushed the utilization rate from 40.91 EH/s in July to 46.09 EH/s in October. But even with these improvements, the fundamental economics remain challenging when bitcoin prices fall.

A Symbolic Fresh Start

Cango used the latest earnings release to make some symbolic changes that underscore its evolution. The company now reports results in U.S. dollars instead of Chinese yuan, and converted its New York listing to trade ordinary shares instead of the American depositary receipts commonly used by Chinese companies. ADRs are often criticized for providing less transparency, so the switch to ordinary shares sends a signal about Cango's commitment to operating more like a standard U.S.-listed company.

These changes make sense for a company that's moving away from its Shanghai roots in the Chinese car services business and repositioning itself as a global technology infrastructure player.

Following the Right Role Model

The stock market's reaction to Cango's journey has been mixed. Shares soared initially after the bitcoin pivot announcement and continued climbing as cryptocurrency prices rallied. But they've dropped about 30% this year, closely tracking bitcoin's recent downturn. Fellow miner Mara (MARA) shows a similar pattern, down 31% for the year.

Perhaps the better comparison for Cango's future isn't a bitcoin miner at all. GDS (GDS), one of China's leading independent data center operators, has seen its stock surge 47% this year on investor enthusiasm about high-performance computing infrastructure for AI applications. That's the kind of company Cango hopes to become, and it's a trajectory that could matter a lot more than bitcoin's daily price swings.

The question is whether Cango can successfully navigate yet another transformation while keeping the lights on in its current business. Bitcoin mining was supposed to be more stable than selling cars in a weak Chinese market. Now it turns out AI infrastructure might be more stable than bitcoin mining. At least this time, Cango is thinking several steps ahead rather than just looking for the nearest exit from a struggling business.

    Cango's Grand Plan: From Bitcoin Mining to AI Infrastructure Powerhouse - MarketDash News