Friday, July 15th 2022

BTC Mining Cost Reaches 10-Month Lows of $13,000

Even as the price of Bitcoin and cryptocurrency in general tumbled some 60% in as many months, miners don't seem to be winding down their efforts at all. In fact, in what could be seen as a doubling-down in the value of crypto, miners have been seemingly investing in both more powerful and more power-efficient rigs. While mining rig prices too have tumbled along with crypto prices, these aren't small investments at all. Yet according to JPMorgan, they have allowed miners to decrease the average cost of mining a single Bitcoin down to $13,000 from its $24,000 average just a month ago.

The $13,000 figure is the lowest since September 2021. Remember that Bitcoin mining costs are affected not just by energy prices, but also by the amount of hash power available to the network, which automatically changes its mining difficulty to cater to higher (or lower) miner demand. And as energy prices have increased, miners have been taking less power-efficient rigs offline, which would cut into their profits - explaining the reduction in overall hash rate.
According to Bloomberg, lower Bitcoin production costs can potentially ease miner selling pressure by improving profitability. Bloomberg did also say that in a bear market, lowered production costs might also lower the ceiling price at which miners are willing to sell their Bitcoin, thus potentially driving Bitcoin price lower.

Interestingly, $13,000 is the same price bottom that analysts say Bitcoin could be expected to hit, considering its historic drops of 80%+ from All Time High (ATH) achieved in each of the precious bull markets. At the moment, Bitcoin's price of $20,715 represents a 70% drop from its previous ATH in November 2021.

Even with these investments, however, Bitcoin miners are reeling from one of the lowest profitability ratios of all time, as energy prices and falling Bitcoin cost have sunken their teeth in the amount of profit available for takers. Bitinfocharts reports that mining profitability is currently at its lowest levels since October 2020 at a (comparatively measly) $0.095 per day per terahashes per second. Yet most Bitcoin miners would tell you that profits only materialize when they sell - and with some analysts expecting Bitcoin pricing to explode to $100,000 in the next couple of years, miners might just be willing to play that long a game.
Source: Cointelegraph
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31 Comments on BTC Mining Cost Reaches 10-Month Lows of $13,000

#1
xtreemchaos
every miner i know has packed it in with the price of power here in the uk if thayed tryed to keep going its like thay are burning there money.
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#2
AusWolf
Hasn't Bitcoin switched to proof-of-stake? Or was it Etherum?
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#3
Bomby569
AusWolfHasn't Bitcoin switched to proof-of-stake? Or was it Etherum?
neither. The 1st has been out of the game for a long time, and Ethereum is delaying that since forever and will continue to do so i imagine because money
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#4
Testsubject01
Does this surprise anyone? Crypto mining is quite literally the digital equivalent of directly printing money.
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#7
MarsM4N
Has to be pretty bad. A Youtuber is already begging his followers for donations to offset his bitcoin losses. :laugh:
Just speechless. Social media "stars" are really out of touch with reality & have zero dignity.

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#8
awesomesauce
it because recession is coming and people invest/trust in something more stable than bitcoin.

indeed play long term :)
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#9
DeathtoGnomes
Raevenlordet according to JPMorgan, they have allowed miners do decrease the average cost of mining a single Bitcoin down to $13,000 from its $24,000 average just a month ago.
JPMorgan being JPMorgan is up to embellishments AGAIN. BTC didnt hit $13k, according to Coinbase (a better authority than JPMorgan) charts, lowest it hit was $17.5k on/around June 17th. Another chart on the stock exchenage, BTC-USD shows lowest was $18.1k on that day. This is the reesult of not fact checking.
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#10
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
awesomesauceit because recession is coming and people invest/trust in something more stable than bitcoin.

indeed play long term :)
More like depression
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#11
80-watt Hamster
DeathtoGnomesJPMorgan being JPMorgan is up to embellishments AGAIN. BTC didnt hit $13k, according to Coinbase (a better authority than JPMorgan) charts, lowest it hit was $17.5k on/around June 17th. Another chart on the stock exchenage, BTC-USD shows lowest was $18.1k on that day. This is the reesult of not fact checking.
The claim was not that BTC price hit $13K, but the average estimated cost to mine a single BTC dropped to $13K.
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#12
bogmali
In Orbe Terrum Non Visi
If you came in here to spew your (crypto) hate, leave! LQ's have been issued and pls don't message me asking why it was LQ'd-you knew what you were doing when you posted it:shadedshu:
Posted on Reply
#13
R0H1T
MarsM4NHas to be pretty bad. A Youtuber is already begging his followers for donations to offset his bitcoin losses. :laugh:
Just speechless. Social media "stars" are really out of touch with reality & have zero dignity.

And you know what people donate towards these scams :shadedshu:
Posted on Reply
#14
DeathtoGnomes
80-watt HamsterThe claim was not that BTC price hit $13K, but the average estimated cost to mine a single BTC dropped to $13K.
you are correct there. But thats not what I was referring to:
RaevenlordInterestingly, $13,000 is the same price bottom that analysts say could expect Bitcoin, considering its historic drops of 80%+ from All Time High (ATH) achieved in each of the precious bull markets. At the moment, Bitcoin's price of $20,715 represents a 70% drop from its previous ATH in November 2021.
If that is still referring to the cost to mine, I clearly misinterpreted the part about bitcoins price. I did assume JPMorgan said this also.
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#15
Beertintedgoggles
DeathtoGnomesJPMorgan being JPMorgan is up to embellishments AGAIN. BTC didnt hit $13k, according to Coinbase (a better authority than JPMorgan) charts, lowest it hit was $17.5k on/around June 17th. Another chart on the stock exchenage, BTC-USD shows lowest was $18.1k on that day. This is the reesult of not fact checking.
From my understanding and from this news blurb, $13k is referencing the cost to mine a single Bitcoin. Later on it states analysts say $13k could be the bottomed out value of that Bitcoin. For an analogy, they are factoring the cost of the shovel, slues box, mine claim, food, labor, etc. to mine an ounce of gold which better be less than the actual value of that ounce unless you have a Youtube channel and are just doing it for entertainment.

Edit: I had my window open way too long before responding and everyone and their brother already chimed in.
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#16
MentalAcetylide
Well if anyone is interested in investing in this sort of thing, the dips are where to go in. However, if you stay in when this happens after having invested at a higher point, you just have to ride it out. Pulling out when this happens can be worse; especially if there's a good possibility that it can bounce back. I don't think crypto mining is finished just yet. :shadedshu:
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#17
80-watt Hamster
MentalAcetylideWell if anyone is interested in investing in this sort of thing, the dips are where to go in. However, if you stay in when this happens after having invested at a higher point, you just have to ride it out. Pulling out when this happens can be worse; especially if there's a good possibility that it can bounce back. I don't think crypto mining is finished just yet. :shadedshu:
Oh no. Not remotely. Not until it's either banned or institutionalized. Ok, on a long enough timescale, maybe crypto becomes stable and "legitimate" organically. But my money's on one of the other two happening first, somewhere in the next 5-10 years. But I have nothing but intuition upon which to base that prediction, so wouldn't actually wager more than a Benjamin.
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#18
DrCR
Well, at this price, I might make a rather small play, and by that I mean buying not mining. (Wish I did when I first heard of ~15 years ago, but how was I to know it would prove to be a successful tulip market.)
What would be the best route to take for said play for those otherwise financially savvy but Bitcoin/forex clueless?
Posted on Reply
#19
80-watt Hamster
DrCRWell, at this price, I might make a rather small play, and by that I mean buying not mining. (Wish I did when I first heard of ~15 years ago, but how was I to know it would prove to be a successful tulip market.)
What would be the best route to take for said play for those otherwise financially savvy but Bitcoin/forex clueless?
The thread's trending toward moribund, but you may get some insight by asking here.
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#20
MarsM4N
R0H1TAnd you know what people donate towards these scams :shadedshu:
Yes, SIMP's. :) Funny anecdote: the term is banned on Twitch, the simp heaven.

MentalAcetylideWell if anyone is interested in investing in this sort of thing, the dips are where to go in. However, if you stay in when this happens after having invested at a higher point, you just have to ride it out. Pulling out when this happens can be worse; especially if there's a good possibility that it can bounce back. I don't think crypto mining is finished just yet. :shadedshu:
Well, that's the nature of speculation. Someone's loss is another's gain.
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#21
R-T-B
AusWolfHasn't Bitcoin switched to proof-of-stake? Or was it Etherum?
Ethereum is by years end. Bitcoin is already a nonissue for gpu supply, but still an environmental concern.
Testsubject01Does this surprise anyone? Crypto mining is quite literally the digital equivalent of directly printing money.
Gotta love the lack of economic understanding in these threads.
Posted on Reply
#22
R0H1T
R-T-BEthereum is by years end.
Right & probably half of this forum's still waiting for HL3, maybe Scam Star Citizen as well :rolleyes:
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#23
R-T-B
R0H1TRight & probably half of this forum's still waiting for HL3, maybe Scam Star Citizen as well :rolleyes:
I've been a skeptic of all but the most recent gestures, which seem genuine as they are actually implementing most of the necessary coded motions.
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#24
R0H1T
But the proof of the pudding is in the eating, this is still some ~2 quarters away?
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#25
mechtech
eidairaman1More like depression
Ya, not judging by the prices. I remember watching a documentary on the great depression. They were interviewing a guy that lived it, think he quoted something like "you could buy a dozen roses for a nickel............but who had a nickel??"

Even in 2008 when the economy tanked at the end of the year, you could buy a new 4x4, crew cab, 1/2- ton pickup tax in for around 30k ($CAD)

If prices remain as high as they are and stuff keeps selling, industry should keep running and so jobs should remain.............

Covid era kind of reminds me of the 80s

I guess I better double down on my mortgage before I'm paying 15% on it!!
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