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Nvidia Faces Lawsuit Over Hidden Crypto Mining Revenue

By

Shweta Chakrawarty

Shweta Chakrawarty

A U.S. court certified a class-action lawsuit against Nvidia and Jensen Huang over $1 billion in GPU mining revenue allegedly hidden.

Nvidia Faces Lawsuit Over Hidden Crypto Mining Revenue

Quick Take

Summary is AI generated, newsroom reviewed.

  • Plaintiffs allege Nvidia hid $1 billion in GPU sales to miners as gaming revenue in 2017-2018.

  • The class action certification follows Nvidia's failure to prove its disclosures had no market impact.

  • The civil case mirrors a 2022 SEC settlement where Nvidia paid $5.5 million for similar failures.

  • A crucial case management hearing is scheduled for April 21, 2026, to set the trial timeline.

A U.S. court has allowed a major lawsuit against Nvidia to move forward. The case also names its CEO, Jensen Huang. Investors say the company hid over $1 billion in revenue linked to crypto mining. The court reviewed the claims. Furthermore, decided the case can continue as a class action. This means a group of investors can now fight the case together. 

These investors bought Nvidia stock between August 2017 and November 2018. The judge said Nvidia could not prove that its actions had no effect on its stock price. Hence, the case will now go to the next stage. A key hearing is set for April 21, 2026.

What the Lawsuit Is About?

The lawsuit goes back to the crypto boom of 2017-2018. At that time, demand for graphics cards went very high. Many miners used Nvidia’s graphics cards to mine crypto. Investors now say Nvidia did not clearly report how much of its sales came from crypto mining. Instead, they claim the company placed much of this revenue under its gaming business.

Hence, the company’s gaming numbers looked stronger than they really were. Investors say this created a wrong picture of Nvidia’s business. They also claim the company did not fully explain how much it depended on crypto demand. When the crypto market later slowed down, Nvidia’s stock also dropped. This raised more questions about what was shared with investors at that time.

Earlier Fine Adds to Concerns

This is not the first time Nvidia has faced trouble over this issue. In 2022, the U.S. SEC fined the company $5.5 million. The regulator said Nvidia failed to clearly disclose how crypto mining affected its business. This added more weight to investor concerns.

Now, this lawsuit builds on those earlier issues. It brings the same questions back into focus. If the court finds that Nvidia misled investors. The company could face serious penalties. The case could also impact how companies report similar data in the future.

Why This Case Matters?

This case is important because it shows how closely crypto and tech are connected. During the crypto bubble, several tech companies saw a spike in demand. But when companies do not clearly explain where their revenue comes from, problems can follow. 

Investors rely on accurate and clear information. If that trust is broken, it can result in lawsuits like this one. The case also shows that old crypto events still matter today. Even though this happened years ago, the impact is still being felt.

What Happens Next?

The court case will now proceed. In the upcoming months, each side will make its case. The hearing on April 21 will be a crucial step. It might influence how the case proceeds from this point forward. Currently, Nvidia continues to grow in other areas like AI and data centers. 

But this legal case adds new pressure. In the end, the outcome may depend on one key question. Did Nvidia clearly tell investors where its money was coming from? That answer could decide how this long running case ends.

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