Bitcoin
Bitcoin is a virtual currency that surged in popularity in 2013. Bitcoin are mined by computers solving complex financial puzzles. Bitcoin production is limited to 21 million and at the end of 2013 there was an estimated 12 million Bitcoin in circulation.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch strategists, David Wo, explains Bitcoin this way:
Bitcoin is a digital currency designed by Satoshi Nakamoto, a pseudonym, in January 2009. Bitcoin allows users to send payments within a decentralized, peer-to-peer network, and is unique in that it does not require a central clearing house or financial institution clearing transactions. Users must have an internet connection and Bitcoin software to make payments to another public account/address.
Satoshi is the smallest unit of Bitcoin; 1 Bitcoin contains 100 million Satoshi. By design, the supply of Bitcoins cannot exceed 21 million Bitcoins (2,100 trillion Satoshi). The total amount of Bitcoin in circulation will increase predictably, based on its underlying code, until reaching the cap in 2140. The current supply is 12 million Bitcoins or 57% of the eventual total (Chart 2). A public history of all transactions is continuously updated and verified by "miners" who gather batches of new transactions into blocks and attach these blocks to the end of the "Blockchai"n. This public history forms a ledger of transactions where every single Satoshi is tracked from its first owner to the present owner. Having the full history publicly available guarantees that a buyer actually owns the number of Bitcoins he or she wants to spend, preventing fraud.
Bitcoin supply is increased with every new block of transactions added to the public history (i.e. Blockchain). The verification of new transactions by miners is relatively easy and many transactions can be easily compressed in a single block. However, there is a computational task for each block of a high degree of difficulty designed to constrain the increase in the money supply, no matter how slow or fast the overall mining network is. If no external transactions are outstanding, a block with a single transaction to pay the miner would be produced. Indeed, the first several thousand blocks simply paid the miner and contained no other transactions (presently blocks contain a record of hundreds of transactions). This way the initial seed currency was distributed to miners who bore the speculative risk in the Bitcoin's success.
As a rough analogy, suppose competing journalists (miners) are asked to document the national news on each given day for the National Archives. The journalist is asked to write down the events (transactions) in a book (block) and the Archive will eventually buy one such book for a fixed fee. To determine which of the books the Archive will buy the archive has an additional requirement for journalists that the book contains the fingerprints of 10 people whose birthday was on that particular day. Note that the list of people isn't related to the national news (transactions) but is simply meant to control the supply of books coming out per day. As more journalists collaborate to find people, the Archive increases the number of fingerprints required.
Exchanges allow the conversion between real-world fiat currencies and Bitcoin. The participation in exchanges requires consumers to take on credit risk by transferring Bitcoins from a personal account to a third-party's account, which is similar to entrusting real-life cash to depository institutions. However, unlike banks, Bitcoin third-party accounts are not regulated nor do they provide FDIC protection. While personal accounts are easy to secure, start-up exchanges in overseas jurisdictions with online digital wallets are often targeted by hackers. Exchanges also have some risk of the operator absconding with the money before the currency conversion is completed. Major exchanges ordered by volume are BTC China (CNY), OkCoin (CNY), Mt.Gox (USD, EUR, GBP, JPY, AUD), FXBTC (CNY), Bitstamp (USD), Bter (CNY), BTC-E (USD), BTCTrade (CNY), VirtEx (CAD).
Bitcoin as a medium of exchange, distinct from speculative transactions on exchanges, initially gained popularity with companies involved within the Bitcoin ecosystem. For example, miners can purchase specialized chips with Bitcoins. To facilitate transactions, payment processors such as Bitpay provide software to merchants, and absorb FX volatility risk by guaranteeing exchange rates and sending daily bank payments. Since April 2013 significant investment was made into start-ups that develop and promote Bitcoin as a means of exchange for merchants (as opposed to speculation investment on the exchange). For example, CoinLab has received seed money to incubate other Bitcoin start-ups like mining companies and exchanges. The most notable company to accept Bitcoins may be Baidu, a major Chinese portal, which began accepting Bitcoin for its online security services in October 2013.
The rapid rise in BTC prices (292% a year) has generated a comparable exponential growth in mining revenue, which in turn has attracted large capital investment. Indeed, the number of computations has grown 521% a year, requiring expensive, heavy-duty Bitcoin-mining chips. The competition for revenues has taken away the low-hanging fruit and each dollar mined is now hundred times "deeper". Electricity costs are also going up as miners use more computers.
View Older Stories View More Recent Stories
-
Cango Inc. Announces New CFO and Change of Director
-
Cango subsidiary EcoHash launches digital platform for AI computing services
-
Cango's HPC and AI Inference Subsidiary, EcoHash, Begins Commercial Operations
-
Cango Inc. Filed Its Annual Report on Form 20-F
-
Cango reduces bitcoin mining costs 19.3% through fleet optimization
-
Cango Inc. Announces March 2026 Operational Update; Strategically Optimizing Mining Fleet and Improving Production Economics
-
Cango completes $65 million investment and $10 million convertible note deal
-
Cango Inc. Completes US$65 Million Strategic Investment and Secures US$10 Million Convertible Note Financing to Strengthen Financial Position and Drive AI and Energy Expansion
-
Cango receives NYSE notice for share price below $1
-
Cango Inc. Receives Notice Regarding NYSE Continued Listing Standard
-
Cango Inc. Reports Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2025 Unaudited Financial Results
-
Cango Inc. to Report Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2025 Financial Results
-
Cango Inc. Announces February 2026 Computing and Energy Operations Update
-
Cango secures $75.5 million in equity investments from insiders and external investor
-
Cango Inc. Closed the Previously Announced US$10.5 Million Equity Investment from EWCL and Secured US$65 Million Additional Equity Investments
-
Cango Inc. Closed the US$10.5 Million Equity Investment and Secured US$65 Million Additional Equity Investments
-
Cango outlines shift from bitcoin mining to AI compute infrastructure
-
Cango Inc. Releases 2025 Letter to Shareholders
-
Cango Inc. (CANG) Completes Bitcoin Sale to Strengthen Financial Position and Advance AI Transformation
-
Cango Inc. Completes Bitcoin Sale to Strengthen Financial Position and Advance AI Transformation
-
Cango reports January bitcoin production of 496.35, down from December
-
Cango Inc. Announces January 2026 Bitcoin Production and Mining Operations Update
-
Cango reports 569 bitcoins mined in December 2025
-
Cango Inc. Announces December 2025 Bitcoin Production and Mining Operations Update
-
Cango secures $10.5 million investment from existing shareholder EWCL
-
Cango Inc. Secures US$10.5 Million Investment from EWCL to Accelerate Growth
-
Cango receives $10.5 million investment from major shareholder EWCL
-
Cango Inc. Announces New Equity Investment from EWCL
-
Cango Receives Buy Rating, Upbeat on its Asset-light Mining Model and AI Potential
-
Greenridge Capital Starts Cango Inc. (CANG) at Buy
-
Cango reports 546.7 bitcoin mined in November, holds 6,959.3 total
-
Cango Inc. Announces November 2025 Bitcoin Production and Mining Operations Update
-
Cango Inc. Reports Third Quarter 2025 Unaudited Financial Results
-
Cango Inc. Reports Third Quarter 2025 Unaudited Financial Results
-
Cango Inc. to Report Third Quarter 2025 Financial Results on December 1, 2025, Eastern Time
-
Cango begins trading Class A shares on NYSE after ending ADR program
-
Cango Inc. Class A Ordinary Shares Begin Trading on NYSE
-
Cango reports 50 EH/s bitcoin mining capacity, plans NYSE direct listing
-
Cango Inc. Releases Letter to Shareholders
-
Cango Inc. reports October Bitcoin mining production decline
-
Cango Inc. Announces October 2025 Bitcoin Production and Mining Operations Update
-
Cango to terminate ADR program, list shares directly on NYSE
-
Cango Inc. to Terminate ADR Program and List Class A Ordinary Shares Directly on NYSE
-
Cango reports 616.6 bitcoin mined in September, holds 5,810 total
-
Cango Inc. Announces September 2025 Bitcoin Production and Mining Operations Update
-
Cango Inc. Reports Second Quarter 2025 Unaudited Financial Results
-
Cango Inc. to Report Second Quarter 2025 Financial Results on September 04, 2025, Eastern Time
-
Cango produces 663.7 bitcoins in august, surpasses 5,000 total holdings
-
Cango Inc. Announces August 2025 Bitcoin Production and Mining Operations Update
-
Cango acquires 50 MW bitcoin mining facility in Georgia for $19.5 million

