Former Iced Tea Maker Cancels Purchase of Bitcoin Mining Rigs

Long Blockchain announced Friday that it was no longer pursuing a purchase of 1,000 AntMiners.

AccessTimeIconFeb 2, 2018 at 5:45 p.m. UTC
Updated Sep 13, 2021 at 7:31 a.m. UTC
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Less than a month after agreeing to purchase 1,000 AntMiner S9 crypto mining rigs, former iced tea maker Long Blockchain has scrapped the plan.

In a Friday filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the company announced it would not purchase either the mining rigs or the power supply units it had originally indicated it would buy in a filing early in January.

No reason was given for the change in plan. However, when the purchase deal was originally announced, it was noted that the company had until Jan. 31 to raise $4.2 million to complete the transaction.

At the time, Long Blockchain said it would issue 1.6 million shares of common stock to raise $7.7 million.

It is unclear how successful the company's fundraising attempts were, though the company did call off its stock sale a week later.

Shamyl Malik, head of the company's blockchain strategy committee, said in a press release that buying bitcoin mining computers was only one aspect of the overall strategy. Despite the decision not to buy the AntMiners, which Malik said "was negotiated as a no-risk option to the company," Long Blockchain still believes in mining cryptocurrencies.

Malik continued:

"We will continue to evaluate the purchase of mining equipment for Bitcoin and other digital currencies as part of our larger blockchain initiative, which includes among other potential transactions the proposed merger with [blockchain startup] Stater."

Since the beginning of the year, Long Blockchain's stock price on the Nasdaq exchange has fallen nearly in half, to $3.10 Friday. At current trading levels, it runs the risk of being booted off Nasdaq's exchange.

Cabling image via Shutterstock

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