Sberbank Apologizes for Buying Nearly All Graphics Cards on the Russian Market
Russia has been suffering from a shortage of graphics cards that can be used to mine cryptocurrencies, causing their prices to almost double. However, it was not ordinary households that purchased most of these cards. State-owned Sberbank has come forward, admitted to buying them, and apologized for causing the shortage. Also read: Bitcoin-Based Ethereum Rival RSK Set to Launch Next MonthSberbank Apologized for Buying Up Graphics Cards
Sberbank, the largest bank in Russia and third largest in Europe, is majority-owned by the Russian government. According to senior vice president, Alexander Vedyakhin, the bank’s research lab was behind the dry spell. Ria Novosti reported on Saturday:The reason for the deficit in the video card market was Sberbank, buying up video cards for its laboratory of artificial intelligence.

Is Sberbank Mining Cryptocurrency?

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Shortage of Graphics Cards in Russia
The Chinese online trading platform Aliexpress, an Ebay-like subsidiary of Alibaba, reported in June that there was a surge in demand for video cards in Russia for cryptocurrency mining. “Aliexpress associated a surge of interest in video cards with the desire to use them to generate cryptocurrency,” the publication emphasized, adding that:The trading platform reported that its users began to look more actively for specific models of video cards that are most suitable for creating crypto-farms (GeForce GTX1060, GTX1070 and Radeon RX480), and the number of bitcoin miner requests increased 150% in a month.
Prior to Sberbank’s confession, RT reported that “the recent surge in the value of bitcoin has caused a jump in demand for video cards, which are used in cryptocurrency mining.” In addition, “people buy up to 600 video cards at once,” the publication detailed, noting that this has caused “a nearly 80 percent price surge since the spring.” According to Vedomosti, the spike in demand has caused the price of graphics cards to rise “by an average of twice: for example, a device that cost in spring 16,000-18,000 rubles now costs more than 30,000.” The news outlet added that one store promised that the cards can be ordered within a week while another said it would take 10 days. Do you think Sberbank is mining cryptocurrencies? What do you think of them buying up most graphics cards in Russia? Let us know in the comments section below.Images courtesy of Shutterstock and Sberbank.
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