
The man whose GPUs power Bitcoin mining just described the network in a way most crypto advocates never have and he didn’t mention price once.
Key Takeaways:
- Huang: Bitcoin stores excess energy as transportable currency.
- Bitcoin runs on ASICs, not GPUs – NVIDIA’s crypto role is altcoins.
- NVIDIA holds zero Bitcoin on its corporate balance sheet.
- Unlike Strategy and Tesla, NVIDIA keeps crypto off its treasury.
Jensen Huang, the CEO of the company whose hardware has been deeply embedded in the cryptocurrency ecosystem for over a decade, recently said something about Bitcoin that most people in crypto haven’t managed to say clearly in ten years. He didn’t talk about price. He didn’t talk about adoption cycles or institutional inflows or digital gold. He described the mechanism, and he did it in three sentences.
🔥 NVIDIA CEO JENSEN HUANG: BITCOIN IS STORED ENERGY
There is never enough energy. Bitcoin captures it and turns it into portable currency. pic.twitter.com/SK28WVqqO5
— CryptosRus (@CryptosR_Us) May 26, 2026
“Essentially, what Bitcoin is doing is taking excess energy, storing it into a new form. It’s called currency. And you take that currency and you take it wherever you like. And so you took energy from one place and now you’ve transported it everywhere.”
Bitcoin mining happens mostly where electricity is cheap, stranded hydropower in remote regions, excess natural gas that would otherwise be flared, off-peak grid capacity that has nowhere useful to go. That energy, which would otherwise be wasted or burned off, gets converted into Bitcoin. Stored. And then it moves, instantly, across any border, without a bank, without a wire transfer, without anyone taking three days and a fee to make it happen. Huang isn’t describing a financial product. He’s describing a battery that also works as a wire transfer.
One thing worth clarifying about NVIDIA’s actual position in this picture: Bitcoin mining hasn’t run on GPUs for years. The network moved entirely to ASICs, purpose-built machines that are millions of times faster and more energy-efficient than any graphics card for Bitcoin’s specific algorithm. NVIDIA’s crypto relevance today lives in altcoins, which use different algorithms that GPUs can still handle. The company’s hardware development has shifted almost entirely toward AI and deep learning, with mining a distant memory of the 2021 boom cycle.
Knowing that, the comment lands differently. Huang isn’t speaking as someone whose business depends on Bitcoin mining. He’s describing a system from the outside, the way an engineer looks at infrastructure, what goes in, what comes out, what it solves.
NVIDIA holds no Bitcoin. No cryptocurrency appears in any of its financial filings. The company runs a traditional corporate treasury while peers like Strategy, Tesla, and SpaceX have made Bitcoin part of their balance sheets. Once NVIDIA’s chip ships, Huang has no stake in what gets mined or what price it trades at.
That’s the thing about the quote. Most Bitcoin commentary comes loaded – analysts with targets, funds with positions, founders with tokens to move. Huang has none of that. He described the system his chips once helped run, with no number attached at the end and no price to talk up.
The information provided in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Coindoo.com does not endorse or recommend any specific investment strategy or cryptocurrency. Always conduct your own research and consult with a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.



Be the first to comment