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Author Topic: Hash rate declining slightly in recent weeks.  (Read 4387 times)
Nagle (OP)
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September 29, 2014, 08:17:06 PM
 #1


Hash rate, recent weeks.

The cost numbers have been indicating that it's time for some miners to drop out, and that seems to be happening.

If the green line stays below the red line, the difficulty will drop at the next adjustment.
Sakarias-Corporation
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September 29, 2014, 09:54:23 PM
 #2

This is geart news, for me Smiley

vipgelsi
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September 29, 2014, 09:57:53 PM
 #3

Ya something had to give.
Sakarias-Corporation
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September 29, 2014, 09:58:35 PM
 #4

i'm sure its the bigger coporations giving in now that the price is low. but as soon as it goes up so will the hashrate

TheJuice
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September 29, 2014, 10:57:00 PM
 #5

Price drop plus bfl bust plus variance equals first diff decline is years. Let's hope
hedgy73
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September 29, 2014, 11:31:06 PM
 #6

I'm sure hashrate is declining, with the cost of electricity in most countries and current difficulty / btc price its no wonder.

Mining is not profitable in most countries anymore even with the latest hardware.

I say not profitable. Most miners are not breaking even or in other words, they're losing money.
testerman
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September 30, 2014, 07:41:43 AM
 #7

that big mining farms,companies had just punished themselves..

more mining--->more sell pressure on btc---->>more difficulty--->more electricity cost----->no Return of Invest----> and shut down with negative profit

bitcoin ecosystem is punishing greedy mining farm companies..
TheMinex
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September 30, 2014, 09:39:04 AM
Last edit: September 30, 2014, 09:55:06 AM by TheMinex
 #8

more mining--->more sell pressure on btc---->>more difficulty--->more electricity cost----->no Return of Invest----> and shut down with negative profit ----> sell miners HW under pruduction's (or buy) cost ---> underinvested miners win and worst ( assume this word widely ) HW producers and big farms lost

cicle will repeat when people will (and they will) buy equipement for double (or more) the production's cost, probably because the next price's bubble

the cicle won't repeat when speculators understand that high ROI in bitcoin world is allowed only for very shot timeframe and at a huge risk.

However I don't think the time for true difficulty drop is now  Wink
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September 30, 2014, 10:19:18 AM
 #9

that big mining farms,companies had just punished themselves..

more mining--->more sell pressure on btc---->>more difficulty--->more electricity cost----->no Return of Invest----> and shut down with negative profit

bitcoin ecosystem is punishing greedy mining farm companies..

God I hope so  Cheesy  Come on $100 BTC!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!  Cool

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SMB-2525
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September 30, 2014, 11:26:56 AM
 #10

that big mining farms,companies had just punished themselves..

more mining--->more sell pressure on btc---->>more difficulty--->more electricity cost----->no Return of Invest----> and shut down with negative profit

bitcoin ecosystem is punishing greedy mining farm companies..
Agree. I think home miners who are marginally profitable should hang on to their equipment. If you are paying $0.22 for power, then maybe not so much. If you believe in BTC long term, then lower prices are good short term.

The fact that hash rate is no longer increasing even though we know at least some brand new equipment is coming on line means we start to understand the economics of the older mining farms. Some of them can no longer pay the bills at BTC less than $400. By pay the bills I meet are cash poor or choose not to operate equipment at a loss. So some of the 2013 equipment is getting turned off. At a power plus marginal operating cost of $0.12 GHS, a 2W/GHS miner is no longer profitable. If you saw my post about Chinese power prices, they are all over the map. If anybody knows when the power cost of hashing dropped below 2W/GHS, please share it with the group.

IMHO, this means that at least some large mining operations have to regularly sell their BTC to keep the lights on. Mine and hold is not an option to them. As discussed in other posts - this becomes a death spiral until miners start shutting down-thus stabilizing the drop in BTC price. I see at least two possible dynamics:

1. A farm is still at break even on the fixed costs with newer equipment. It is just the older equipment operating at a loss on marginal operating costs. This means the marginal cost of operating the older equipment is just the power (and a bit of labor). That equipment can be turned back on if difficulty drops or BTC price increases.
2. A farm does not have enough of the right type of hashing power to cover fixed and marginal costs and are shutting down either voluntarily, by the power company or by their landlords. These farms are much less likely to come back up if operating profitability of BTC mining improves.

In either event, as I have mentioned many times, the current economics makes investment in a new generation of ASICS highly problematic for the mining companies. I do have an MBA to go with my Physics degree. The business case would not pass muster here in the US. If I am right, then we may see a fairly steep  drop in the rate of difficulty increase as long as BTC price stays low.

Further, there is nothing to put upward pressure on BTC prices because industrial miners now dominate production. They have to sell.

As the OP said bitcoin ecosystem is punishing greedy mining farm companies. Delicious.
mmeijeri
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September 30, 2014, 01:02:56 PM
 #11

Punishing and greed is the wrong frame IMO. Home miners are no less greedy than industrial miners, and profit motive isn't a bad thing. Home miners are simply having their asses handed to them, and uncompetitive data centers will also go out of business. This is simply a case of market forces in action, and it's healthy. I really doubt home miners will be able to maintain a significant share of the total network hash rate and unfortunately this may lead to more centralisation. Mining has become a business, and the rational thing for miners to do is to sell off all their bitcoins. Companies can also speculate in BTC, but these are really two independent business processes. There will be no return to the golden age of accumulating coins cheaply through home mining, just as there will be no return to GPU or CPU mining, no matter how much angry people with financial decisions that didn't pan out complain about it. There's no such thing as an indefinite free lunch, if you want to earn money you have to do something for it: perform competitively priced labour, bear financial risk, or save some money.

ROI is not a verb, the term you're looking for is 'to break even'.
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September 30, 2014, 01:06:25 PM
 #12

I believe its due to BFL...

Nagle (OP)
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October 03, 2014, 05:47:12 AM
 #13

We're halfway to the next difficulty adjustment, and the green line (difficulty if it was adjusted right now) is still below the red line (current difficulty). (The grey line (recent hash rate) is climbing again, though.) So we're on track for a decline in difficulty, or at most a small increase.
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October 03, 2014, 09:20:59 AM
 #14

I think we will see a small increase in difficulty this next time.
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October 03, 2014, 07:04:48 PM
 #15

hash rate going up again, so yeah, most probably will be a small increase.
bitrev
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October 03, 2014, 11:13:20 PM
 #16

We need to drop the BTC/USD to 250, so 30% of the 'cloud' miners stop. Then it will be nice.
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October 03, 2014, 11:16:19 PM
 #17

A difficulty decrease would be awesome but I'll believe it when I see it. I turned off all My S1s a while back. They were costing more in electricity than they were making in Bitcoin. Would make me very happy if I could turn them on again.

Where did you get the chart?

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bigasic
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October 03, 2014, 11:18:25 PM
 #18

IF the price continues to slide, I think you will see the big farms start to sell off their equipment as they need the price to be at a certain point to be profitable. When they purchased the equipment, the btc price was probably above 600, so a 300 dollar price is pretty scary for them..
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October 03, 2014, 11:21:50 PM
 #19

IF the price continues to slide, I think you will see the big farms start to sell off their equipment as they need the price to be at a certain point to be profitable. When they purchased the equipment, the btc price was probably above 600, so a 300 dollar price is pretty scary for them..

Big farms? The "big farms" are the ASIC manufacturers. Their equipment costs are a fraction of what retail machines cost. And their equipment is hosted in areas of the world where they pay a fraction of what your average home miner pays for electricity.
Nagle (OP)
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October 04, 2014, 03:54:29 AM
 #20

Where did you get the chart?
https://bitcoinwisdom.com/bitcoin/difficulty
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