Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Core Scientific's second quarter fiscal year 2022 earnings call. This is Steven Gitlin, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations for Core Scientific. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. We will conduct a question-and-answer session after management's remarks. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded for replay purposes. Before we begin, please note that on this call, certain information presented contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements include, without limitation, any statement that may predict, forecast, indicate, or imply future results, performance, or achievements that may contain words such as believe, anticipate, expect, estimate, intend, project, plan, or words or phrases with similar meaning.
Forward-looking statements are based on current expectations, forecasts, and assumptions that involve risks and uncertainties, including, but not limited to economic, competitive, governmental, and technological factors outside of our control that may cause our business strategy or actual results to differ materially from the forward-looking statements. For further information on these risks, we encourage you to review the risk factors discussed in Core Scientific's periodic reports on Form 10-K and Form 10-Q filed with the SEC and the Form 8-K filed today with the SEC, along with the associated earnings release and the safe harbor statement contained therein. This afternoon, we're also filing a slide presentation with our earnings release, and we're posting the presentation on our website at corescientific.com in the Events and Presentations section. The content of this conference call contains time-sensitive information that is only accurate as of today, August 11, 2022.
The company undertakes no obligation to make any revision to any forward-looking statements contained in our remarks today or to update them to reflect the events or circumstances occurring after this conference call. Joining me today from Core Scientific are Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Mike Levitt, and Chief Financial Officer, Mrs. Denise Sterling. We will begin with remarks from Mike Levitt, Mike.
Thank you, Steve. On behalf of our entire team, welcome to today's second quarter 2022 earnings conference call. On today's call, we'll provide highlights from our second quarter, discuss our financial performance, comment on current market conditions, and provide thoughts on how we are structuring our company for long-term success. Core Scientific operates more Bitcoin mining servers in our facilities than any other public company in the United States. We have eight data centers operating in five states and expect to be in operation on our ninth data center in Oklahoma within the next few quarters. Our purpose-built, company-owned data centers now hold over 200,000 servers in approximately 800,000 sq ft. By year-end, we expect to be operating approximately 300,000 servers, of which more than half will be for our own self-mining operations in over one million sq ft.
I will discuss our future plans in more detail later in this call. First, I'd like to introduce my colleague and our CFO, Denise Sterling, to discuss our financial highlights.
Thank you, Mike, and good afternoon. I will review results for second quarter as compared to the same period one year ago. Total revenue consisting of self-mining, hosting, and equipment sales increased by 118% to $164 million from $75.3 million, driven primarily by an increase in our self-mining revenue. The total number of Bitcoin produced in the second quarter was 3,365 compared to 180 for the three months ended June 30, 2021. The average price of Bitcoin was $32,500, a decrease of 30% as compared to $46,500 for the three months ended June 30, 2021. Total hosting revenue increased by 110% to $38.9 million.
Equipment sales for the quarter decreased by 90% to $30.5 million, as the majority of our hosting customers now purchase their miners directly from manufacturers for deployments in our data centers. Cost of revenue increased by $100.5 million to $151.3 million. The increase was primarily attributable to an increase in our number of self-mining and hosted servers operating in our facilities. Power consumption increased by $45.9 million, depreciation rose by $46.3 million, and personnel and related expenses and facilities cost increased by $25.8 million. Related expenses included stock-based compensation of $16.9 million. The increases were offset by a decline in equipment sales of $17.6 million.
Cost of revenue for the three months ended June 30, 2022 included depreciation expense of $49.1 million, of which $46.5 million was from the self-mining segment. For the three months ended June 30, 2021, cost of revenue included depreciation expense of $2.8 million, of which $0.9 million was for self-mining segment. With increases in energy prices generally, we expect our average power price for the year to now come in at about $0.05-$0.055 per kWh. Prices do move around seasonally, and the extreme heat across the South has impacted our pricing for the second quarter and will continue to do so in the third quarter.
Gain from the sales of our digital assets was $11.8 million for the three months ended June 30, 2022, resulting from a total sales price of our digital assets sold of $265.8 million versus the carrying value of $254.0 million. Consistent with prior quarters, we recorded several non-cash accounting entries in the second quarter of 2022, including the impairment of digital assets, impairment of goodwill, a fair value adjustment to our convertible notes and stock-based compensation. Impairment of digital assets increased by $150.2 million for the second quarter as a result of a decline in the price of Bitcoin. An impairment is recorded when the carrying value of our digital assets exceed their fair value based on current market pricing.
We recorded a goodwill impairment of approximately $840 million due to a revaluation of our assets resulting from the sustained decline in Bitcoin price, the decline in the market capitalization of public Bitcoin mining companies, including Core Scientific, and the uncertain outlook for our industry. We recorded a favorable non-cash fair value adjustment to our convertible notes of $195 million due to a decrease in their value resulting from the decline in our stock price. We will continue to mark-to-market our convertible notes each quarter. Total operating expenses increased by $106.9 million to $115.9 million. This increase was primarily driven by $92 million of stock-based compensation, representing 86% of the total increase. This resulted from the removal of the IPO transaction trigger from outstanding RSU awards that had previously met the time vesting requirement.
In order to ensure we are well-positioned to achieve our objectives, we have taken a disciplined approach to reducing operating expense growth. We have eliminated the majority of our discretionary expenses, reduced headcount by 10%, renegotiated vendor contracts, and right-sized the organization to focus on our core business. We now expect our operating expenses in the second half of the year to be 25% lower compared to the first half of the year. Net loss of $861.7 million decreased by $858.3 million from a net loss of $3.4 million. The increase in net loss was primarily driven by the non-cash items I spoke about earlier. Adjusted EBITDA increased by $38.3 million to $59.1 million.
The increase was driven primarily by increased revenue of $88.7 million, offset by higher cost of revenue, excluding depreciation and stock-based compensation of $37.3 million, and increased operating expenses of $13 million, excluding stock-based compensation. Adjusted EPS for the quarter ended June thirtieth, 2022, was $0.18 per share. Our total cash position at June thirtieth, 2022, including cash equivalents, and restricted cash, was $140.5 million, a year-to-date increase of approximately $8.8 million. The primary drivers of this change included inflows from operations of $151.9 million and proceeds from borrowing of $415.1 million.
These sources of cash were partially offset by cash outflows for infrastructure costs to build our purpose-built data centers of $238.5 million, payments to vendors for our ASIC servers of $217.7 million, interest and principal payments on our outstanding debt of $72.7 million, and payment of tax obligations for vesting of employee RSUs of $29.3 million. By net settling our RSUs, we reduced our outstanding share count by approximately 14 million shares. In order to better understand our self-mining business cost structure and break-even price for producing Bitcoin, we are introducing a metric that we call cash to mine. It produces a view of the marginal cash cost to mine a single Bitcoin and represents the cash-based components of cost of revenue divided by the number of Bitcoin mined for the period.
There are two cash-based components of this calculation. The first is our power cost, which is based on price per kilowatt-hour. The second is our data center cash-based operating cost, which include the expenses required to operate, maintain, secure, and secure our data centers, including personnel and related expenses and facilities cost. These two components are included as part of our total cost of revenue. As the metric is cash-based, it does not include expenses such as stock-based compensation or depreciation. For the first half of 2022, our power cost per Bitcoin was approximately $8,500, and our data center operating costs were approximately $1,700. As such, our cash to mine a Bitcoin for the first half of 2022 was approximately $10,200.
We expect our cash to mine a Bitcoin to vary quarter by quarter, primarily based on fluctuations in power cost and global hash rate. Now I would like to turn the call back over to Mike.
Thank you, Denise. In a previous earnings call, I explained that approximately two-thirds of our 2022 growth would occur in the second half of the year. We're now in the second half, and we remain confident that will be the case. As we stand here today, we operate eight data centers in five states with approximately 800,000 operating sq ft. By year-end, we continue to expect to have developed a total of over one million sq ft of operating facilities. We operate approximately 125,000 self-mining servers and expect to increase that number to approximately 170,000 by year-end. We operate 86,000 servers for our colocation customers and expect to increase that number to approximately 125,000 by year-end. We deployed 14,000 servers in the month of July and have already deployed more than 17,000 servers in the first 10 days of August.
We are currently mining over 40 Bitcoin per day on average, and yesterday we mined a record 45.7 Bitcoin in a single day, likely the most Bitcoin ever self-mined in a day by a public company. As the market and economic environment deteriorated in the second quarter, we took a number of actions to ensure that our business remains well-positioned to navigate these difficult times. We conducted a full review of our businesses, our costs, and our balance sheet. First, I will address our balance sheet. On the asset side of our balance sheet, we've invested in excess of $1 billion in our infrastructure and our servers since the company's inception. Our approximate half-billion-dollar investment to develop world-class blockchain computing data centers will generate returns for years to come.
No other company in the United States has invested as heavily or built as significant infrastructure to support the production of Bitcoin. While others search for infrastructure to support their business, we own, control, and operate our own. By developing purpose-built facilities, we have the ability to employ immersion or any other process that we believe will improve our productivity. We are currently running immersion pilot tests in a number of our data centers. Our half-billion-dollar-plus investment in servers will also generate returns for years to come. Our servers should be mining Bitcoin well beyond their depreciable life. We have built and maintained significant liquidity through these volatile times. We think it is prudent, and we think it is wise. We have chosen to create liquidity by selling our digital assets. In the current environment, we do not believe it is sensible to increase our debt.
We have total debt of approximately $960 million, excluding accounting reserve adjustments totaling just less than $200 million, as illustrated on slide 12. Slightly more than $500 million of our debt is our privately placed convertible notes. Those notes mature approximately three years from now in April of 2025. They have little cash impact in the interim because they bear interest in cash at a rate of 4%. They have a non-cash 6% pay-in-kind feature and no principal payments required until maturity. We are very comfortable with the maturity in 2025 and the likelihood that our stock will be, hopefully soon, at a level where this debt converts to equity. We owe B. Riley approximately $57 million, payable monthly over the course of the next 11 months. The loan was originally $75 million, but we have paid down $18 million already this year.
Again, we are very comfortable with our obligations to B. Riley. As for our equipment financing, out of the 170,000 or so self-mining servers we plan to operate by the end of the year, approximately 86,000 are currently encumbered by debt or leases. Equipment debt and leases total approximately $330 million today. Through the end of July, we have paid approximately $75 million in principal amortization this year and are comfortable with our ability to continue to service our equipment debt. We have multiple options for creating and maintaining liquidity. We have and will continue to sell our Bitcoin. Our current Bitcoin production provides us the unique ability to replenish our digital assets rapidly. As we previously discussed, we have also entered into a $100 million equity line of credit. We can tap that line anytime over the next two years. Environments like this demand focus and require critical decisions.
Since Core Scientific was founded, we have focused a majority of our time and capital investments on site selection, development, and technological innovation to facilitate the deployment and management of our infrastructure and mining servers. We are a developer and operator of blockchain computing data centers. We own and operate more infrastructure and servers than any other company in the United States. That is what we do and who we are. That is our focus. Building reliable, geographically distributed data centers that enable the deployment and efficient operation of mining servers is the biggest challenge faced by the digital asset mining ecosystem. This infrastructure did not always exist in the United States, and that is why Core Scientific accepted the challenge to build enterprise-grade digital asset mining data centers five years ago.
We have pared our business back to concentrate on what we do best, develop data centers and operate ASICs in our purpose-built facilities. We have moved out of any business not central to our mission and are focusing our resources on continuing to build our core business. To that end, we have discontinued our blockchain technologies development business. We have taken costs out of our corporate activities and are continuing to develop ways to execute our business more efficiently. To date, we have eliminated approximately 10% of our workforce, none of whom are involved in our data center activities. While taking steps to become leaner and more efficient, we remain focused on growing our business and improving profitability. The current market turmoil and difficulties facing other companies attempting to develop infrastructure have enabled us to work with our vendor partners to reduce expenses and build more efficiently.
As such, we believe our near-term data center development expenses over the next six months will be significantly less than what we had previously anticipated. We have paid for all but approximately $10 million of the cost of the remaining 50,000 self-mining servers to be deployed. We are confident that all 170,000 of our servers will be up and running by year-end. We hope to expand our self-mining fleet beyond 170,000, but have not yet committed to purchase additional servers. We continue to make discounted offers for stranded new miners. We took a long, hard look at our hosting business. Historically, the business delivered low profitability. We will no longer take on hosting business that is not sufficiently profitable from day one.
We have restructured our pricing to improve margins over time, including refinements to price per kilowatt hour, contract term, infrastructure and configuration fees, and prepayment terms. We want our customers to make a profit, but we also want to ensure that our business is making money too. We fully expect our hosting business to be profitable and cash generative going forward into 2023. Over time, we think the hosting business should be a 20%-30% EBITDA margin business. Initial customer set acceptance, including our recently announced agreements for 75 MW of colocation capacity, validate our new strategy. Even during this challenging digital asset market, customers are eager to colocate their servers at Core Scientific because of the value they see in our offering. Now let's talk a little bit about the future.
We continue to expect to achieve an operating hash rate of between 30 and 32 exahashes and 1 GW of power by the end of 2022. This is based on the continued expansion of our server fleet to approximately 300,000 units, approximately 170,000 of which will be dedicated to self-mining, and continued progress in our data center project in Texas and Oklahoma, as well as continued demand from colocation customers. Based on an end of 2022 network hash rate assumption of 250 exahashes, we expect to be producing or self-mining approximately 2,000 Bitcoins a month by the end of 2022. Our self-mining fleet is new and efficient, consisting of S19s, S19 Pros, and S19 XPs. We are well positioned for years of productive mining.
Our company designed, developed, populated, and now manages the largest blockchain computer data center business for self-mining and colocation services in North America. As we disclosed in last week's July update press release, we operated total hash rate of 19.3 exahashes, including 10.9 exahashes in our self-mining business as of July 31. We have built our leadership position in the blockchain infrastructure market by investing a total of more than $1 billion in infrastructure and servers since the inception of our business. We have strategically located and developed data centers in diverse geographic areas. While we continue to curtail our growing operations in Texas in response to grid operator needs, the majority of our data centers are located in other states, reducing the impact of Texas-specific events on our overall Bitcoin production.
Within Texas, we are working with ERCOT on the CLR program and aim to deploy our Minder software to help provide automatic demand response to the grid. Our track record of innovation and growth in our industry speaks for itself. Denise introduced today our new cash to mine metric. Given the environment, we are pleased with a cash cost of slightly in excess of $10,000 to mine a single Bitcoin in the first half of 2022. We believe this is an important way to assess our efficiency and future profitability. We offer a unique and powerful business model that represents a compelling equity investment in blockchain data centers and, at a minimum, a levered investment to the price of Bitcoin.
All said, despite the difficulties our industry has endured this year, assuming a constant Bitcoin price and modest growth in the global hash rate, we are on pace to generate in excess of $700 million in revenue and approximately $300 million in EBITDA. Thank you to our amazing team, who continue to focus on executing our plans during a very challenging time. Thank you to our customers for continuing to rely on Core Scientific. Thank you to our shareholders who remain committed to the long-term opportunity this company and this team are working to realize. Steve, we will now take questions.
Thanks, Mike. We will now begin the question and answer session. If you have a question, please press star and then the number one on your touch-tone phone. If you wish to be removed from the queue, press the pound or hash key. If you're using a speakerphone, you may need to pick up your handset first before pressing the numbers. Once again, to ask a question, please press star and then one on your touch-tone phone. Our first question comes from Lucas Pipes at B. Riley. Hi, Lucas?.
Thank you very much, Steve. Good afternoon everyone?.
Mike, I wanna thank you for the disclosures. This is really a really terrific detail, both in the release, the presentation, and also the prepared remarks, so we appreciate that.
Oh, thank you. Thanks, Steve, and Denise, and all my colleagues.
Yeah, no, this is really good work. I wanna follow up on the power price a bit. I think you mentioned $0.055 prepared remarks or it was mentioned. Just wanted to confirm that, and then if you could maybe speak to maybe pushing power prices up and down. Obviously, there are inflationary pressures on the power side, but then you're also expanding in Texas, so wondering how kind of power costs could evolve in the next six to 12 months. Thank you very much for your color.
Sure. We think that all things considered, heat waves, pressure on energy prices, macroeconomics, et cetera, that a reasonable full year assumption is in that 5-5.5 range. There are a number of things that move it around. One is certainly seasonality. Our power prices are probably net a bit higher in these warm months, especially when you get, you know, 50 days of 100-degree temperatures across the South, including Texas. That has an impact. There's also sort of a less well-known aspect of developing in Texas, which is that, generally speaking, the power prices are a bit higher as you develop a facility, and then as the facility scales, those prices come down considerably.
It's fair to say we think that our pricing in the fall and winter will probably come down from where it is this summer. It's also, I think, fair to assume that as we have our Texas facilities fully scaled going into next year, that on average, our power pricing overall should come down a bit from where we expect it to be full year this year because we are, you know, to our detriment, we're ramping Texas this year. It's not fully up to scale. By the end of this year, our facilities in Texas will be fully scaled. It's gonna move around a bit from this year to next year, but we expect that to be a positive movement as opposed to a negative movement. Did that answer your question, Lucas?
Very helpful. Really appreciate the color. Staying on the topic of cost, I think it was also mentioned in the prepared remarks that you expect operating expenses to decline by about 25%. I wonder what sort of... First, did I hear that right? Then, what are some of the drivers that bring those costs down? Thank you very much.
Yeah. No, thank you so much for the question. I think, you know, consistent with what you, what we commented on earlier, we really did take a disciplined approach. Quite frankly, it was more surgical than suggesting that we were going to take, across-the-board reductions. You know, as we suggested, really, the cost savings were around personnel and/or areas of our organization that were not necessarily part of that core business, as Mike had suggested, that we were really doubling down on and going to focus on.
In addition to, you know, taking a look at some of our project-related professional fees and things of that nature, where we said, "Look, we have the ability to control these and the timing." If they were discretionary, that we literally, you know, took a position that they were going to be eliminated. I don't think that this has a significant impact on our ability to meet our objectives. As Mike had suggested, we did not impact anybody from a data center perspective.
Great.
Thank you.
My next-
I'll try to squeeze one last one in.
Go ahead, Lucas.
If possible. Sorry about that. Just, you know, I was hoping it might be possible to quantify the backlog on the hosting side. We continue to hear a lot about shortages. You mentioned some of your peers having trouble.
Yes.
securing data center space. How would you frame that up?
I think it's fair to say that what we hear from prospective customers, anecdotally, is that there continues to be a lack of availability of up and running now or in the near-term infrastructure. That a number of folks have been, you know, highly disappointed with the delays that have occurred. You know, we now make a habit of announcing any significant hosting agreements as they occur in order to kind of provide as much transparency in that regard as we can. It continues to be the case that we are in dialogue with demand that exceeds our capacity this year. Generally speaking, it does take, you know, some time to get to agreement.
We think that we'll have some additional announcements this quarter with regard to hosting, but there is no guarantee of that, right? Of course, you know, strength in Bitcoin pricing helps. But the other aspect of it is a lot of folks that don't have a home for their mining equipment also don't have capital. We stated in our prior earnings call, we are only interested in working with colocation customers that have the ability to make prepayments and are very, very creditworthy as such. We're not talking to everybody that's got rigs on the ground in warehouses. We are talking to the folks that have capital and rigs on the ground. You know, that said, the pipeline is very strong, but we're also quite sincere about making sure that our hosting business is a profitable business.
In the call it the good old days, we used to be a reseller of servers, and there was margin in that, and we could look at the margin in that and combine that with our hosting agreements and look at the overall profitability. Now that we really don't have a very vibrant, you know, reseller business because most folks are going direct to the manufacturers, our hosting business needs to stand on its own two feet without the benefit of margin coming from equipment sales. You know, for some folks, that's a bigger hill to climb.
As demonstrated by the 70 MW of agreements that we recently announced, there are folks that are well-capitalized and recognize the value in terms of the uptimes, the efficiency, the life of the servers, and the technology overlay. They recognize the value. Without the benefit of those resale margins, you know, we had to take a good hard look at the hosting business and reconstruct it a little bit to make sure that we're getting paid for the investment we've made in infrastructure and technology and the capabilities that we offer.
Mike, thank you very much, and to you and the team there, best of luck.
Thank you.
Thanks, Lucas. Our next question comes from Chris Brendler at D.A. Davidson. Good afternoon Chris?.
Hi, Steve. Thanks a lot for taking my question, and congratulations on the results. Really want to echo comments earlier about the disclosure. Very, very helpful. Thank you so much. Along those lines, really enjoy, you know, hearing more details about your power costs and the outlook. I think that's been a key question that a lot of us on the outside have been wrestling with. Mike, if you could maybe talk to some specifics, if you can. Sort of I think there's been some challenges in Georgia just getting sort of contracts aligned. Then in Texas, are you currently able to sell power back to the grid and take advantage of these spikes in prices, or is it still on the come? Thanks so much.
We have not, if you will, earned revenue from Texas for curtailing. Obviously, we think it benefits our power costs, but we are not in an earning revenue mode. We are working, as we mentioned today, on implementation of the CLR program utilizing our software and technology capabilities. You know, that's something that we hope to have in position sometime this year, but it probably will not be something that's in position by the time the heatwave hopefully subsides within the next few weeks. In the future, we very well may have the ability to in fact you know have a mutually beneficial economic relationship with the grid operator, but we'll just have to see where that goes.
With regard to our facility in Georgia, you know, we've been working with the power provider there to do sort of the best they and we can. That is the one place where we have the greatest what I would call exposure to the variability of natural gas pricing. We've been working with them to try to develop as efficient a program as possible. But it absolutely does impact our overall cost right now and has. That's, you know, that's part of what has driven us to raise our full year estimate for where power pricing is coming in, has been, you know, kind of that facility, that factor as it relates to that power provider.
Okay, great. A bigger picture question for you, Mike, is, you know, as I've been talking to investors and sort of riffling with the outlook here as prices have come down but now stabilizing and thinking about the halving in 18 months or so, or a little more than that, you know, I think I'm really focused on companies that can take advantage of advanced power relationships and/or more efficient mining operations. You know, give me your high-level thoughts on sort of behind-the-meter facilities that potentially would use renewables, or you know, fleet upgrades, immersion technology. You know, where do you stand on the XPs? Is that going to be a significant part of your rig portfolio by the end of next year?
Just some of those high-level comments would be great. Thanks.
Sure. In no particular order, one, we mentioned that we've been running immersion testing in a number of our facilities. Immersion to us is simply an economic question, can we get the efficiency and productivity that makes it worth the expense? We've been testing equipment from a number of immersion equipment providers to see what we like, to see what is efficient, to see, you know, what's worth the cost, et cetera. I would be, you know, surprised if within the next 12 months, we're not operating some considerable portion of our self-mining fleet in an immersion setting. That's one. Two, we are trying to skew all of our development activity to more and more efficient and predictable power provision.
You know, looking back, you know, clearly, you know, perhaps the Georgia facility wasn't the best decision we ever made. I wasn't in this seat at the time. You know, we're trying to work that out with the power provider there. That said, we're going to be developing where we think we've got a really good handle on power and, you know, and as high a predictability as possible. You know, that's true with our Texas sites. It's true with our Oklahoma site. We feel pretty good about those facilities. You know, those facilities probably by some point next year in the aggregate, you know, will be a considerable percentage of our operating facilities.
We are actively engaged in conversations about alternative forms of power, supplemental or other, behind-the-meter and otherwise. I think that everybody in our industry is doing so because we would all like to get our power costs down prior to, you know, mid-2024, and to be managing them as inexpensively and prudently as we possibly can. There's nothing that we, you know, sitting here today can tell you or can promise, but we can say that we're working very hard on all of that. As we also mentioned, you know, about our facilities, one of the nice things about having purpose-built facilities is not only are they purpose-built, but they are repurposable.
The fact that, you know, our business is not really built on steel containers in an exposed environment, but rather in structures, allows us a lot more flexibility in pivoting to more efficient mining processes.
That makes a ton of sense. Thanks so much for that detail. What about the XPs? I don't think you placed a huge order at the peak of the market, so that was probably a smart thing to do.
I forgot about that part of your question. Yeah, the answer is yes, we do have XPs coming. As we mentioned. Look, we're trying to be very efficient buyers in this market. There are a lot of stranded servers that are here today and that are coming tomorrow. Again, can't promise that any of our conversations will be fruitful. You know, like you would expect, we're trying to pick up some high-quality equipment at low prices. We'll see how it plays out the next six months.
No, those. Your patience there will be well rewarded. Thanks so much for the comments, and we'll catch up later. Thanks.
Thanks for your questions.
Thank you, Chris. Once again, to ask a question, please press star and then one on your touchtone phone. Our next question is coming from Stephen Glagola at Cowen. Good afternoon Stephen?.
Hey, good afternoon, Steve. Thanks for the question. I just want to drill down a little bit more on the cost. Denise, you know, you listed where the 25% OpEx is coming out of. Does that exclude non-cash items? It does. Okay. It does. Thank you. Also, Mike, I just wanted to get more color on the decision to amend the performance condition that allowed for the RSUs to vest. If you can just provide any color on that'd be great.
Sure. It wasn't a performance condition. Without throwing any lawyers under a bus, the way the RSU program was drafted way back when, as opposed to being drafted saying that, you know, there was an event condition, which would be, you know, a sale of the company or going public, it set up a sale of the company, if you will, or, you know, technically, you know, an IPO. It just inadvertently, frankly, missed that you can go public through a SPAC. Those RSUs were all already time vested. It represented, frankly, five years of RSUs for our people. What our board was doing was fulfilling what had been the intention, and which makes a lot of sense, right? That's how companies usually work.
You know, you've got time vesting, and then of course you've got, you know, when you go public plus when you time vest. For whatever reason, the way it was drafted required our board to take action or, you know, the RSUs would have, you know, even though we're public, nobody would ever get their RSUs. You know, I don't know about my colleagues, but if I was never gonna get my stock, I'm not sure I would have stayed, right? It really was to correct something that just wasn't, in my view, drafted properly when it was originally set up years ago. But to be clear, we didn't accelerate anybody's RSUs. Every one of those RSUs. Our RSUs vest over four years. It's not like it's a short vesting period or anything like that.
All of those RSUs had met the time vesting requirement. It was a very technical issue that occurred. Now, we did elect to do a net settlement. Frankly, the reason was, and it looks like it was a pretty smart trade now, was that our stock price at the time was so low that by net settling, we could effectively, you know, pull, you know, what was, you know, 4%-5% of our outstandings out at, you know, at a, you know, price that's well below where the stock's trading today. Did that answer your question?
Appreciate that, Mike. That was. Yeah, no, that was very helpful. Thank you. If I can just ask one more follow-up here on the June update. I believe you know, you said approximately 90% of the rigs were already paid for. Was there a downward market price adjustment on that 90%? And if so, could you quantify it? And then additionally, like, what is the remaining CapEx, if any, on the infrastructure spend? Thank you.
The answer is yes. We, you know, as I think, we've said in the past, you know, our agreements have the market price adjustment or mechanism in them. Yes, our manufacturer was, you know, did the right thing and was kind enough to agree that a market price adjustment was warranted. That certainly significantly reduced our obligation as it related to those machines. Because we'd already paid in so much because they're such near-term deliveries, you know, it more or less, you know, took away, you know, most of what we owed at the time. It was, yeah, it was principally related to the adjustment. I don't remember the exact magnitude, frankly, of what we had left versus what they reduced at that time.
It was in the tens of millions of dollars, order of magnitude. You know, it wasn't $2 or $3 million bucks. It was, you know, I think it was in that $20-$30 million range, but I don't remember precisely. That did have a very beneficial impact for us. What was the second half of the question?
Was just on the remaining infrastructure CapEx, if there, you know, what's remaining there. Thank you.
We're currently sitting at about 600 MW operating. To get to where we need to get to, that kind of ±1 GW, which takes care of our miners and our contracted hosting, you know, that's in the order of magnitude of $50-$75 million to get that up and running fully.
Okay. Thank you very much, Mike. Appreciate it.
The reason I give you a little bit of a range is, you know, I should have thanked also our vendors at the end of my thank yous, because, you know, the folks we work with in developing our infrastructure have been great partners in this time frame as well, which we're appreciative of. As you know, a lot of folks have had to cancel or whiff on orders for everything. It's not just miners, it's also transformers. You know, we've benefited from some price reductions on some of the development activities we've got going on.
Thanks.
Thank you, Steven. Our next question comes from Kevin Dede at H.C. Wainwright. Hi Kevin?.
Hi, Steve. Hi, Mike. Thanks for having me on. Congrats.
Hey, Kevin.
On everything you've done. Hey, you know, Mike, you and the team are super aggressive in site selection and buildout. I was wondering if you could just sort of at a high level kind of kick off sort of the primary attributes of each site as you work into them. Just sort of based on your experience in Georgia, I'm kind of wondering how you shifted, you know, Core's approach.
Fair question, and a good question. In no particular order, you know, one is power provision and predictability of that power provision. Related to that is being closer to the actual provider of power. You know, one of the issues that we face in Georgia, and the folks in Georgia are, you know, they're good folks, okay? I like them, and we're all trying to be constructive and work through the issues, but they are generally a buyer. It's a utility company. They're generally a buyer of power and then a provider of that power as opposed to a producer of power. We want to be closer to the production as opposed to simply the provision. That's one, call it, you know, lesson learned attribute that we are very focused on.
Second has to do, you know, with some of these grid and weather interrelationships, right? You know, we love our sites in Texas, and we like the folks in Texas, and we're based in Texas. I recognize that this is an unprecedented heatwave, you know, but it's still not very fun to be curtailing, you know, kinda, you know, four-five hours a day when it's 104 degrees. You know, that has implications for our productivity. You know, we need to be very careful about what percentage of our operations reside where you can have that kind of an issue, right? Is second.
Third is certainly, you know, our ability to get closer to renewable resources and kind of the behind-the-meter aspects that, you know, we were asked about. Fourth has to do with availability of talent in, you know, what is a hard-to-hire environment. We need good people, good maintenance techs that we can train in our facilities. We are running, you know, big, high-powered facilities with, you know, on average more than 30,000 servers in each. We're running them 24/7. You need that. I think early on, we got the gig to make sure we were coming to places where we're welcome, where we're invited, where they want us, where they're glad to have us. I think our local relationships have all been very, very good.
You know, we really haven't had you know, any sort of governmental, political kind of issues. Scalability. I think early on, we were trying to make sure we could create facilities that were 100-150 MW. I think we're leaning more into 200-MW plus type sites now. We believe it's important to be geographically diversified for all sorts of reasons I've talked about in the past, some of which have been, you know, demonstrated this summer. I don't know, Kevin, that's kind of my off the top of my head list. I'm sure that.
Yeah. Yeah. No.
Wes Adams of the Foundry Infrastructure would have more.
No. All sensible points. Thanks for indulging me. Please don't take offense to this. I'm just super curious about the prospects in Georgia. Vogtle Three and Vogtle Four are coming on. I'd expect that could change pricing. I'm just kind of wondering, you know, what your people have told you, if there might be any sort of benefit to that.
I don't think they're related really to what we're doing.
Oh, okay.
You know, given our
Okay.
Where we are, it's just different plan.
Right. Okay. Circling back on immersion, you mentioned a couple of tests. I was wondering if you could speak to any of the data that you're seeing, sort of where you've pushed the envelope to, the kind of performance improvement you're seeing, and any sort of initial feedback on these initial tests.
No, it's still probably too early to comment. I don't want to speculate. Sorry.
Yeah. No apologies. Understood. Fair. Do you think that any of the Texas heat issues could be mitigated through that technology, or is it really more of an ERCOT asks you to decision?
It's really more of a grid curtailment issue than it is an inability to operate the equipment, you know, in a passive air environment. You know, when the grid gets down to, kind of, you know, under 10 gigawatts, probably under six GW of excess capacity, you know, we get phone calls.
Right.
Even though the entire industry probably isn't 1 GW in the state yet, you know, we can represent, call it, 20% of the excess capacity. We're less than 1.5% of the total capacity, but we're 20% of the excess capacity when they're trying to run a four-five GW excess.
Right. I know you've been questioned on this already, so apologies again, Mike. Can you talk to the length of time it might take before you're able to leverage your PPA into a sale agreement?
No. You know, look, we're having really constructive conversations with the folks at ERCOT. They're good people. Look, we're trying to be a good citizen, right? We wanna do what's right for our company. We wanna do what's right for Texas. So it's just too early to talk about how that's gonna come out.
Okay. Yeah.
Kevin, we really appreciate the questions. In the interest of schedule, we're gonna have to call it here. We thank everybody for their
Oh, yeah. No problem. Understood, Steve. I just wanted to thank you all for entertaining the questions. Really, really great to speak to you both again.
You too.
Thanks, Kevin. At this point, we thank you all for your attention and for your interest in Core Scientific. An archived version of this call, all SEC filings, and relevant company and industry news can be found on our website, corescientific.com. We wish you a good day, good afternoon, good evening, and we look forward to speaking with you again following next quarter's results.