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A well-known ASIC chip manufacturer recently received a compliance notice as its listed stock failed to maintain the minimum bid price of $1. According to regulations, the company has a 180-day remediation period, during which it must maintain a closing price of $1 or higher for 10 consecutive trading days; otherwise, it faces delisting risk. Since mid-November last year, the stock price has consistently failed to break through this key psychological level, amid significant adjustments in the crypto mining industry. However, it is noteworthy that the company recently announced a large order of 50,000 Avalon A15 Pro miners, indicating that demand for high-performance ASIC hardware still exists amid market volatility, offering a glimmer of hope for the industry.
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Avalon’s order is truly a lifesaver; whether the stock price can hold up depends on this.
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To put it simply, the order came too late. Two months earlier, it might not have been so desperate.
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Haha, chip factories are like this—when life and death are at stake, orders come in. Honestly?
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Whether these 180 days can be survived depends entirely on whether these 50,000 mining machines can be delivered.
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As long as the mining industry remains active, it’s better than completely cooling off.
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The key is whether this order can offset the stock price’s dip. Easier said than done.
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It’s another 180-day game; regardless of how good the business is, you have to endure.
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The most worrying thing is that the order looks good on paper, but the profit margins are collapsing.
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Order of 50,000 mining machines, now that's real money. No need to panic when the stock price breaks $1.
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Is this the end of delisting risk? I actually remain optimistic about hardware demand.
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180-day rectification period... Honestly, this is a bit uncertain, but a big order coming in is still promising.
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Still willing to order 50,000 units now, which shows deep water can still be trusted.
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The stock price keeps falling but orders haven't stopped. That's the resilience of mining machine manufacturers.
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Why is the psychological price of $1 so hard to reach? But no one can replace hardware in this area.
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I just want to know when these 50,000 units will be delivered. Will the cash flow be able to save the market then?
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Even after breaking below the IPO price, they can still receive such large orders. The industry's basic outlook isn't as bad as imagined.
Can this deal be a lifeline? Or is it just a temporary rebound?
The stock price breaking below $1 is truly critical, but hardware demand is still there, indicating miners still believe in this company.
A last gasp of hope? I think it's more like a desperate final attempt... I hope I'm wrong.
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Delisting risk is right here, but the orders are coming in? Interesting, is this a pump?
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Basically, it's a gamble—betting that the price will rebound within 180 days, betting that the demand for mining machines truly exists.
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I just want to know who is so foolish as to buy a large number of mining machines now... unless they already know something.
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While issuing delisting warnings, they are selling 50,000 units aggressively. This pace is a bit desperate.
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If this order is real, a rebound in the stock price is guaranteed, but the key is whether it can stay above $1 for 10 consecutive days within 180 days.
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Mining machine manufacturers are playing this game well, combining bad news with good news, familiar with the routine of cutting leeks.
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It feels like a life extension; no one really knows what the genuine demand is.
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Anyway, I can't understand it. The delisting notice comes together with large orders—what does this mutual combat mean?
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Breaking the $1 mark is really a hurdle, a psychological price point that has become a life-and-death line.
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Delisting risk? Don't rush. This order shows that the product still has competitiveness.
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Chip manufacturers can still secure such large orders in a bear market, which really shows they have some skills.
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The key is whether the stock price can be pushed back above $1 within 180 days. It all depends on whether subsequent orders can be sustained.
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Mining machine demand is still there, indicating the fundamentals haven't collapsed. The only concern is that the stock price reacts too slowly.
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This pace... receiving large orders but the stock price is still on the floor, which is indeed absurd.
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As long as the Avalon A15 Pro sells well, the stock price will eventually catch up.
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Delisting risk is a bit uncertain, but this large order shows the market still recognizes hardware
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Compliance notice is scary, but as long as it can be brought up within 180 days, it's not a big problem
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Avalon A15 Pro being sold is a sign of vitality; in the crypto winter, this order has high gold content
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The stock price is hammered down to this level but still received a 50K order, indicating customers still believe in the performance
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It's so hard to break through the $1 mark, it takes real orders to support it
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Mining machine orders are coming in, yet the stock price is still at rock bottom? Market sentiment and fundamentals are wildly disconnected
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This is the real deal, speaking with actual orders rather than just concepts
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A turnaround within 180 days is challenging, but the 50,000 units order definitely gives hope
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Hardware demand is there, and the stock price will eventually reflect it; it depends on whether it can hold through these 180 days
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Another delisting warning, mining machine manufacturers are getting harder and harder
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Avalon, this order can't save the stock price... unless there's more to come
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Wow, 50,000 units? The demand is stronger than I thought
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Breaking the psychological price point of one dollar is do or die, so exciting
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So what if there are many orders? If the stock price doesn't rise, it's dead
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These 180 days are probably the final ultimatum. Let's see if they can hold on
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The demand for mining hardware is still there, indicating the industry isn't completely dead
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The stock price has been suppressed and can't go up, there's some deep water behind it
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The 50k unit order still doesn't seem enough to fill this gap