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Nvidia fined $5.5 Million for Hiding GPU Sales to Crypto Miners

  • Donovan G.
  • May 6, 2022
  • 2 min read

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Nvidia will pay $5.5 million to settle charges that unlawfully obscured how many of its graphics cards were sold to cryptocurrency miners. The US Securities and Exchange Commission announced the charges and a settlement with the company today. The order claimed that Nvidia misled investors by reporting a huge boost in revenue related to “Gaming,” hiding how much of its success relied on the far more volatile crypto market. Nvidia isn’t admitting to wrongdoing as part of the settlement, but it agrees to stop any unlawful failures to disclose information.


The changes stem from Nvidia’s fiscal year 2018 financial reports. The SEC notes Nvidia saw an explosion in crypto mining-related sales in 2017 when the rewards of mining Ethereum grew dramatically. Crypto mining was widely reported as a cause of GPU scarcity, and Nvidia launched a separate CMP line specifically for mining, attempting to prevent shortages for gamers. But employees acknowledged that many gaming GPUs were still going to miners. “The company’s sales personnel, in particular in China, reported what they believed to be significant increases in demand for Gaming GPUs as a result of crypto mining,” the order says.


Given the boom-and-bust nature of cryptocurrency, this meant Nvidia’s sales numbers didn’t necessarily indicate reliable future growth, making investing in it riskier. “NVIDIA’s analysts and investors were interested in understanding the extent to which the company’s Gaming revenue was impacted by crypto mining and routinely asked senior management about the extent to which increases in gaming revenue during this time frame were driven by crypto mining,” the SEC alleges.


Despite this, Nvidia didn’t mention mining-related sales as a factor in its gaming division’s success. Meanwhile, it mentioned crypto as an important factor in other markets, which suggested to the SEC that it was being deliberately deceptive. And investors’ anxieties turned out to be well-founded. A crypto crash in late 2018 (along with a weakening Chinese market) led it to slash its quarterly earnings projections by $500 million and spurred a shareholder lawsuit.


“NVIDIA’s disclosure failures deprived investors of critical information to evaluate the company’s business in a key market,” says SEC Crypto Assets and Cyber Unit head Kristina Littman. “All issuers, including those that pursue opportunities involving emerging technology, must ensure that their disclosures are timely, complete, and accurate.”


 
 
 

1 Comment


developer skinstash
developer skinstash
Nov 03

Transparency and supply chain accountability are critical in any sector, as demonstrated by the recent case of Nvidia's penalties for hiding GPU sales to cryptocurrency miners. It brought to mind the difficulties I encountered when overseeing delivery for IT products, where precise reporting and storage are crucial to efficient logistics. While researching effective 3PL warehousing services around that time, I came across repackingplus, which clarified for me how expert handling and accurate inventory management guarantee reliability and compliance. Strong logistical procedures stress the value of transparency and trust at every stage of the process, just like Nvidia's instance illustrates the dangers of secret data.

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