Bitcoin investors speculate the upcoming halving could send prices skyrocketing to $90,000 or higher.Â
To the operators of high-speed computers used to mine for bitcoin, the halving looks more like a doubling â of costs.
In a new report, the crypto-focused research firm TradeBlock estimates the average cost to mine a single bitcoin (BTC) could jump to $12,525 after the halving, expected in May. Thatâs nearly double the average cost of $6,851 now. Essentially, miners will have to run twice the number of computations, with a corresponding increase in electricity usage, to get the same amount of bitcoin theyâre getting now.Â
The estimated cost is also well above the current market price of about $10,300, providing an illustration of how the halving could turn the crypto-mining industryâs profitability upside-down if market prices donât rise.Â
The halving was programmed into bitcoinâs original network programming as a a bulwark against inflation when the cryptocurrency was created just over a decade ago. The idea was a predictable and ever-slowing pace of new supply of the cryptocurrency would help to stabilize bitcoinâs purchasing power â a contrast with government-backed currencies that can often be printed at will by human central bankers.Â
Whatâs happening now is a lesson on the emerging economics of bitcoinâs commodity-like market cycles: Crypto mining companies are scrambling to get ready for the halving by upgrading their fleets of computers to include next-generation processor chips that are faster and more energy-efficient.Â
Researchers at the U.S. bank JPMorgan Chase have described bitcoin minersâ average cost as the cryptocurrencyâs âintrinsic value.â Think of it like oil drillersâ cost to pump an incremental barrel: If a drop in the market price renders oil unprofitable, many drillers will shut off the tap until prices rise again. Â
TradeBlockâs estimated post-halving cost of $12,525 assumes the networkâs current processing power, known as the âhash rate,â stays at its current level. The analysis also assumes an electricity price of 6 U.S. cents per kilowatt-hour, which is higher than the roughly 2 cents that some big crypto-mining firms say they can get from the local grid or through wholesale purchasing agreements.Â
Another quibble-prone assumption is that roughly 30 percent of mining computers will âtransitionâ to the latest technology, while 70 percent âremain on older devices,â according to TradeBlock. Some crypto-industry executives say itâs more likely many of the older-generation mining computers or ârigsâ will become uneconomical after the halving, leaving faster machines to dominate the network.
Whatever the case, the threshold bears monitoring closely for bitcoin investors, says John Todaro, TradeBlockâs director of digital currency research.
âItâs very helpful to know what the miners are thinking, what the miners are doing,â Todaro said in a phone interview. âThere might be some miners that are profitable at those levels, but not a lot of miners are going to be operating at a loss, and they might take their rigs offline.â