CoinVoice has learned that Bitcoin mining infrastructure company Luxor has announced the expansion of its hardware business from ASIC to GPU and AI server fields, further extending its procurement, logistics, and financing capabilities to the high-growth artificial intelligence and high-performance computing (HPC) markets. Luxor stated that the core bottleneck currently faced by the industry is the actual shortage of deployable computing power, while mining companies have unique advantages to transition to AI data centers, including power contracts, site infrastructure, and advanced cooling systems. Since its establishment, Luxor has procured over $750 million in ASICs for Bitcoin miners, and this experience will be extended to GPU and server procurement, providing end-to-end solutions, including new machines, refurbished and second-hand equipment. Its channels cover major manufacturers such as Dell, HPE, Lenovo, and PNY, and are supported by U.S. warehousing, international logistics, equipment installation, and hosting construction capabilities. Luxor noted that the current global Bitcoin mining network deployment data center capacity is close to 20GW, with an additional 10GW of potential expansion space, of which 35%-40% is located in the United States. As mining companies gradually shift some capacity towards AI and HPC hosting, Luxor will also adjust its service structure accordingly. As the only mining pool with comprehensive financing and hedging capabilities, Luxor can assist miners in acquiring GPU procurement funds through computing power and can provide structured financing such as sale-leaseback through partners, while its Tenki cloud computing market can help operators immediately monetize computing power resources once the hardware is online. Luxor stated that the company has built a comprehensive infrastructure network covering warehousing with tax advantages in Montana and Delaware, OEM installation, warranty management, export control compliance, and old equipment disposal, aiming to meet customers' billion-dollar capital investment needs in the AI and HPC era. [Original link]

