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Bitcoin Mining Crypto News JPMorgan

Bitcoin Mining Cost Sinks to $13,000 Amid Crypto Winter: Report

According to a global markets strategy PDF released by leading investment bank JPMorgan, the price of bitcoin (BTC) production has sunk to approximately US$13,000 from early June’s US$20,000.

This is reportedly the result of the bear market brought on by the crypto winter:

Bitcoin Miners: Crypto Winter Strikes Back

JPMorgan has found that the production cost to mine one Bitcoin has dropped from an estimated US$24,000 to a lowly $13,000, a 10-month low according to Bloomberg.

The bank’s strategists, led by Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou, have found that the recent plunge in BTC’s production costs resulted from the following combination of factors:

https://www.linkedin.com/in/nikolaos-panigirtzoglou-5012975/overlay/photo/

The decline in electricity use as proxied by the Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index, while the hash rate has been fluctuating in recent months with no clear downtrend.

Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou, strategist, JPMorgan

Despite improved profitability suggesting that pressure for miners to sell their bitcoin holdings for liquidity purposes could lessen, the decrease in costs is typically seen as a negative for the overall bitcoin price:

Although opinions vary, data from MacroMicro suggests that the production cost remains steady at approximately US$17,700. MacroMicro justifies this by explaining that the lower the mining costs, the more miners will join. However, when mining costs are higher than miners’ revenue, numbers will logically fall.

Funding a Mining Operation

The cost of bitcoin mining depends on several variables, chief among which is electricity costs incurred by miners for their required machinery. Providing bitcoin’s price exceeds maintenance costs, a mining operation will be profitable. However, mining operations must also consider infrastructure, labour and hardware costs for the maintenance of mining farms, all of which can vary. This crypto winter is also taking place while energy prices soar globally.

Bitcoin miners aren’t alone in their struggles, however. Miners of all sorts are facing pressure created by the damaging plunge of bitcoin. Among those experiencing exponential lows this year-to-date: Marathon Digital Holdings is down 73 percent, Riot Blockchain Inc has dropped 73 percent, and Core Scientific Inc is down a whopping 83 percent. Worse yet, there’s scope for these figures to continue falling.

Luckily, there is hope when it comes to infrastructure, with the Bloomberg report suggesting mining costs can be reduced via the deployment of more energy-efficient mining rigs, such as those becoming available thanks to Intel and Bitmain.

Bitcoin Falls on Rough Times

July has been somewhat of a nightmare month for bitcoin as it fell under US$19,000 following the US’s highest inflation print in 40 years. Economists had initially predicted an 8.8 percent June year-on-year inflation rate; however, the reality was 9.1 percent, which meant an immediate dip in BTC’s price.

To add further stress, Bitcoin has also had to address the strain placed on diamond hands, namely those investors who normally refrain from selling an investment despite downturns or losses. Glassnode, an on-chain analytics firm, discovered that while the total unique Bitcoin count had exceeded 1 billion, diamond hands were selling at an average loss of 33 percent.

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Australia Crypto News ETFs

Bear Market Sees Aussie Crypto ETF Volumes Dry Up

Australia’s long-awaited and much-debated exchange-traded products are finally in circulation and investors seem … less than impressed. Since the May 12 launch of three ETFs, trading volumes have only been on the decline.

ETF Drought Sets In

Only two weeks ago it seemed that these Australian ETFs had fizzled out on debut, with none of the three new funds (CBTC, EETH and EBTC) able to crack the A$1 million volume benchmark. In the period since launch, sales have only continued to fall, with the current bear market showing an apparent ETF volume drought.

Market Looks to the Cosmos

However, the Cosmos Purpose Ethereum Access ETF (CPET), heralded as the “world’s first physically settled ether ETF”, has just hit the market with high hopes:

CPET saw 2,073 shares change hands on May 31, its debut day. How successful it will be in Australia is yet to be determined. While some are hailing CPET as the kick crypto ETFs need to increase their volumes, as of June 1, the daily return on the newcomer was -5.88 percent.

Aussie ETFs Slow off the Mark

The initial development of Australian-based Bitcoin ETFs had been delayed by several factors, with the journey to launch being long and fraught. Their creation was hampered by high collateral requirements at the beginning of April, with fund managers claiming these were making it difficult for clearing participants to agree to trade the ETFs.