Bitcoin mining stocks are far riskier than Bitcoin itself


Key Takeaways

  • Bitcoin mining stocks have underperformed Bitcoin heavily over the last year

  • Greater competition among miners and higher amounts of energy required means margins are thinner

  • Rising electricity costs and lower value of Bitcoin have also hurt miners immensely 

  • Greater number of variables beyond merely the price of Bitcoin means mining stocks have been trading with greater volatility

It’s a tough time to be a Bitcoin miner. This piece will succinctly break down how and why, as well as delving into why I believe mining stocks are far riskier than just investing in Bitcoin itself. Let’s get to it. 

Mining competition is higher than ever

Firstly, the competition within mining is higher than ever before. The beauty of the blockchain is that we can see all sorts of statistics regarding the Bitcoin network in real-time. One of these is the difficulty adjustment. For the uninitiated, the difficulty adjustment is a mechanism by which the difficulty of mining changes to ensure the new supply of Bitcoin released via mining remains consistent (at approximately ten-minute intervals).

In other words, as more miners join the network, the difficulty increases so that Bitcoin is released at the same pace as prior. The same holds true the other way around – difficulty falls if miners stop operating. 

As the below chart shows, Bitcoin mining difficulty recently smashed through the 50 trillion hash mark for the first time ever. Only three years ago, that number sat at 14 trillion.  

This is great for the Bitcoin network: the more miners, the more secure the network. For the miners themselves, however, that means greater energy amounts are needed to complete this now-more-difficult assignment of validating transactions on the network. 

Oh, and there is a double whammy. As you may realise if you have turned on a light, charged your phone or boiled a kettle in the last year, the price of electricity has skyrocketed around the world. The next chart shows the rise in electricity costs in the US, which according to the Cambridge Electricity Consumption Index, has the highest amount of miners (the nation is responsible for 38% of the network’s hash rate). 

This means that higher amounts of energy are needed to mine, and the cost of that energy has also increased drastically. 

People are using Bitcoin less 

So, we know costs have risen. But the bad news isn’t over yet. 

Bitcoin’s volumes have collapsed throughout the bear market. Perhaps the best barometer of this is to look at the trading volume on centralised exchanges, which fell 46% in 2022 compared to 2021. 

Looking at Bitcoin fees shows a similar pattern, with fees far down on the heyday of the pandemic bull market. This was briefly interrupted in May when the Bitcoin Ordinals protocol sparked a revival in network activity. However, the below chart shows that fees have been falling for five consecutive weeks since (although they are still up significantly on the start of the year), giving up most of those gains. 

Much like the cost side, which saw an increase in inputs required (greater demands via the difficulty adjustment) as well as an increase in the per-unit costs of those inputs (rising electricity costs), the revenue side for miners is also suffering from a brutal double whammy. 

Not only is volume way down from the bull market and hence less fees (revenue) are recouped, but miners’ revenue (fees and the block subsidy award) is received in Bitcoin, which has also fallen in value. This means that, after earning Bitcoin by battling with the greater competition and toiling over increased costs, the value of that Bitcoin (revenue) on the market is substantially less – still 60% off its peak from November 2021. 

Mining stocks are more volatile than Bitcoin

So let’s think about these four variables:

  1. The amount of energy needed
  2. The cost of that energy (electricity)
  3. The fees and block rewards received (i.e. revenue)
  4. The value of those fees and block rewards (the Bitcoin price)

Therefore, not only are mining companies dependent on the price of Bitcoin (variable number four), but it also depends on several other factors (admittedly variables 1 and 3 are heavily dependent on the price of Bitcoin too. In truth, economic incentives will drive mining to a certain price point, but I will discuss in another article). 

Therefore, for the time being at least, the risk is greater with mining stocks than a direct investment in Bitcoin. As with all things, greater risk can mean greater reward, and there have been periods of mining stocks outperforming Bitcoin as a result. 

However, over the last year or so, mining investors are in an even worse state than Bitcoin investors (who themselves are licking their wounds). I’ll let the below mining ETF, launched in February 2022, illustrate this:

All this goes to show how tough mining has been. And that is without even mentioning the big bad wolf that is regulation. The regulatory crackdown in the US has been ferocious, and while Bitcoin has thus far been relatively unaffected, miners are more vulnerable (especially those that are publicly listed in North America) than Bitcoin itself, which is a decentralised asset theoretically immune to regulation (directly, at least). 

This is not meant to be a pro-Bitcoin or anti-mining piece. It is just comparing the two as investments and showing why mining stocks tend to be more volatile. And when you’re more volatile than Bitcoin, that is really saying something.        

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3 reasons why Litecoin price has risen for 7 days straight

  • Litecoin price has drifted upwards in the past seven days straight. 

  • The coin has more than doubled from its lowest point in 2022.

  • Litecoin halving countdown is continuing.

Litecoin price has not been left behind in the ongoing recovery of cryptocurrencies. LTC has risen in the past seven days straight and is now trading at $84.57, the highest point since June 10th. It has jumped by more than 17% from the lowest point this month.

Litecoin is not a security

There are three main reasons why LTC price is surging. First, Litecoin is getting ready for the upcoming halving event, which is scheduled for August 2nd of this year. Halving is a situation where the total rewards offered to miners are reduced by half. 

For Litecoin and Bitcoin, the halving event happens after every four years. And in most periods, Bitcoin and Litecoin prices tend to rally ahead of a halving event, which explains why LTC has jumped by over 105% from the lowest level in 2022.

Second, Litecoin price is rising after a new Wall Street-backed crypto exchange included the coin in its offerings. EDX Markets, which is backed by Citadel Markets, Schwab, and Fidelity, was launched on Tuesday. Unlike other exchanges, it is offering four coins: Bitcoin, Litecoin, Ether, and Bitcoin Cash. It also offers non-custodial services, meaning that it does not handle or store cryptocurrencies.

Third, LTC price is rising because of the recent moves by Blackrock and Deutsche Bank. Last week, Blackrock announced that it had filed for the iShares Bitcoin Trust, which will be the only spot BTC ETF. Other companies like WisdomTree and VanEck have also expressed interest in the fund.

Deutsche Bank, on the other hand, announced that it had filed for crypto custodial license. This is notable since this is the biggest bank in Germany and the 9th biggest one in Europe. Therefore, this crypto news have helped to ameliorate the recent worries on regulations.

Litecoin price prediction

The daily chart shows that the LTC price has risen in the past seven straight days. This recovery started when the coin dropped to the key support level at $71.32, which was slightly above the lowest point on March 11th.

Litecoin remains below the 25-day and 50-day moving averages while the Relative Strength Index (RSI) has moved above the neutral point of 50. Therefore, I believe that the coin has some more upside until it becomes overbought. This means that it could rise to the next resistance point at $90. A move above $90 will see it rise to the next level at $100.

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Bitcoin Cash surges as BCH hits 3-month high: Here’s why

  • Bitcoin Cash price rose to $140 on major crypto exchanges as Bitcoin touched the $29k level after major companies, led by BlackRock, filed for spot ETFs.
  • BCH traded higher after Wall Street-backed cryptocurrency exchange EDX went live.
  • EDX will initially support only 4 tokens – BTC, ETH. LTC and BCH.

BCH is the biggest gainer among the top 50 cryptocurrencies by market cap as Bitcoin Cash news aid bulls’ course.

Bitcoin Cash price’s 24-hour gains of over 25% indeed put it well above other notable gainers Stacks (STX), Optimism (OP) and Render (RNDR).

BCH was also outperforming Bitcoin (BTC), which itself notched impressive gains as it traded to the $29k mark for the first time in over a month.

Bitcoin Cash spikes amid Wall Street crypto news

Wednesday saw most coins trade in green, in contrast to the US stock market that had seen major indices close in the red ahead of Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s two-day testimony.

For crypto, the widespread gains followed on last week’s bounce after asset investment behemoth BlackRock filed for a spot Bitcoin ETF. Today, news of other top asset managers in WisdomTree and Invesco following BlackRock into submitting spot ETF proposals to the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) catapulted bulls into action.

Bitcoin Cash price therefore rose alongside those of other altcoins as sentiment flipped positive. Moreso, the price of BCH could have found a new leg after the Wall Street-backed cryptocurrency exchange EDX Markets went live.

As CoinJournal reported, EDX is a new crypto exchange backed by Wall Street giants Fidelity, Charles Schwab, and Citadel. BCH price might have surged on news that EDX will initially only support four cryptocurrencies – Bitcoin, Litecoin, Ethereum and Bitcoin Cash.

Bitcoin Cash price prediction

The upside momentum from this news is likely why BCH/USD rose to near $140, its highest price level since March 20.  

Bitcoin Cash BCH price chart by TradingView

It remains to be seen if bulls exploit the broader market sentiment to trade higher. If it happens, then BCH/USD could target the psychological $200 area and possibly May 2022 highs.

On the downside, the $100 zone remains a key support area that could act as a demand reload level. Currently, BCH/USD is hovering near $130, about 22% up in the 24-hour range.

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