I have looked around the forums to find which metrics to best use to determine the average price at which most large-scale mining operations will cease being profitable. The closest thread on the topic so far has been written by BurtW
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=518111.0. Unfortunately, it does leave some things to be desired as the thread makes some assumptions which some readers find to be unrealistic (i.e. the Hashing growth rate is going to increase this year by the same proportions as last). I will let you read as to why this is, but I digress.
So, aside from trying to calculate the overhead costs of the individual mining operations, what do you guys think would be another way to estimate this figure?
The reason I am interested is because I very much agree with Burt's notion that; "the difficulty continues to climb at about the same rate and the price continues to go down. This will not last. One of these things MUST give. Either the price needs to go up or the difficulty must stop going up."
I think that amongst all of the market uncertainty at this point, finding the bottom line for the major mining pools would go a long way to establishing a realistic bottom to the declines we have been seeing. What do guys think?