Crypto Hangover Hits Nvidia as Chip Sales Plunge With Bitcoin Prices

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After a stellar rise in business over the last year due to the cryptocurrency boom, chipmaker Nvidia's optimistic figures for graphics card demand in 2018 has drastically fallen short of expectations, with share prices falling by 17 percent on the back of millions of unsold chips.

For Nvidia this equates to a loss in business after demand for its products surged multifold in the second half of 2017.

Rising graphics card demand meant chip prices swiftly increased beyond the budget of the average gaming and P.C. enthusiast as miners purchased vast quantities of the integral component.

Remaining optimistic, Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang believes the slump is temporary, and demand is expected to return to normal levels by the end of 2018.

"The crypto hangover lasted longer than we expected. We thought we had done a better job managing the cryptocurrency dynamics."

As a result of the market, Nvidia has ceased shipping its mid-priced graphics chips to all retailers, instead, focusing on just low-priced and high-priced models.

Revenue margins have decreased by 1.8 percent in the present fiscal quarter, closing at 60 percent.

Nvidia also states that enterprise P.C.-related purchases have decreased by 40 percent after firms abandoned their plans to manufacture mining units.

While analysts anticipated a yearly revenue forecast of $3.4 billion from Nvidia sales, the company expects revenue of only $2.7 billion, plus or minus two percent.

Kinngai Chan, an analyst at Summit Insights, bases most of the problem on Nvidia's "Pascal" gaming chips, which were piling up in August 2018 even as demand for new chips considerably decreased.

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