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Topic: How much does it cost to produce one Bitcoin? (Market Value Comparison) (Read 11743 times)

legendary
Activity: 1596
Merit: 1030
Sine secretum non libertas
legendary
Activity: 1988
Merit: 1012
Beyond Imagination
All this really tells us is that there is a floor price below which newly mined coins will not be added to the market - this floor price is determined by expectation of Return/ghash in BTC and the cost/ghash in $ of the most efficient mining hardware.
This is not a floor on the price of bitcoin as supply from existing holders may still exceed demand.
As mining supply per week is a continuously shrinking % of the outstanding bitcoin stock shouldn't mining cost have less and less impact on the price of bitcoin?

Done a poll before, more than half of the miners hold their coin at least for a year
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/poll-miners-what-will-you-do-with-all-your-mined-coins-296264

And for traders, similar distribution
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/poll-your-trading-style-295753

If majority of them cash out 10% per year, the daily coin net supply on the market will be around 5000-6000 level forever(see my signature for detailed analysis). So, to sustain an exchange rate of $1000, there should be 5 to 6 million USD each day purchasing bitcoin around the world

Money is being printed by the central banks of major economies around the world, each central bank are printing at least 1 billion USD per day, all of them added together will be higher than 10 billion USD per day

Another way is to look at the GDP that might use those coins as currency. World GDP is 80 trillion USD per year, means 220 billion USD worth of goods produced and traded each day, if they are going to use those 500 billion satoshis daily to facilitate the trade...
hero member
Activity: 703
Merit: 502
Let us  consider a miner looking today to buy new mining equipment. Our miner decides that their best mining option is a pre-order mining rig from KNC Miner, a Neptune (for our purposes our miner lives in the EU)
2nd batch Neptune costs $9995+VAT, -> $11,994 (VAT at 20%)
Our miner phones KNC speaks to them and hesitates a guess that the miner (a late 2nd batch order) will be delivered sometime in mid May (optimistic)

Our miner then looks at the growth of difficulty and estimates that mining power will continue to grow at an average of 1% a day between now and mid May (much lower than the current rate - optimistic ), meaning by 14th May difficulty will have reached  6,655,250,955, and in the first return period the Neptune will earn 3.17 BTC, the miner has free power.
The miner then assumes that difficulty will grow at a similar rate thereafter.
Therefore over its life the Neptune will earn 3.17/.1 -> 31.7BTC
The production cost per bitcoin is therefore $378.35 , the miner would not sell Bitcoin above this price

If the growth rate is 1.5% per day on a continuous basis the miner estimates the return will be approx 11.2 BTC over the life of the Neptune, the production cost per bitcoin (again free power) at his assumption is therefore 11,994/11.2, -> $1070.89

If the growth rate continues ad infinitum at the current rate of growth approx 1.8% per day, the return would be approx 6.2 BTC
-> $1,934.52 per BTC min sale price.

Two things -
1) this would only determines the price at which newly mined coins would be released to the market by new miners who take delivery of equipment in May - existing miners who have already hit ROI may sell at any price, but their share of produced coin will be declining.
2) on the 1.5% growth assumption we are adding 25,000 Thash every 11 days to the network by mid June, is that really likely?


All this really tells us is that there is a floor price below which newly mined coins will not be added to the market - this floor price is determined by expectation of Return/ghash in BTC and the cost/ghash in $ of the most efficient mining hardware.
This is not a floor on the price of bitcoin as supply from existing holders may still exceed demand.
As mining supply per week is a continuously shrinking % of the outstanding bitcoin stock shouldn't mining cost have less and less impact on the price of bitcoin?
legendary
Activity: 1988
Merit: 1012
Beyond Imagination

the marginal cost of mining is less than the average cost.  in the near term, while admittedly they have not shipped, cointerra for january delivery sold for 6k USD, 2TH/s, 1200w.  

In the long run, these chips will tend to the $10 range, and hardware will be inconsequential, but by then, say 9 months from now, the yield on 1200w will be about 0.01 btc, so costs are pretty constant until there is a big tech change, say 14nm process with merged litecoin a la gridchip.


The cointerra machines are for May delivery. Those pre-orders might get some profit,  but there are also pre-orders never get anything delivered. So for majority of people who want to get coin now, their choices are limited, they can do a pre-order and hope for the best or buy BFL's rigs directly

No one has ever expected the difficulty would rise so fast during 2013, and the 2014 might be even more surprising. Now the NRE cost for many chips have been paid, those companies can ramp up the production capacity at least 100 times more if they see a hash power war

If you compare bitfury and knc, you will see that the best move for ASIC manufacturer is to produce as many rigs as possible and squeeze many small miners out of the market so that they have to buy more rigs to keep their income from dropping
legendary
Activity: 1596
Merit: 1030
Sine secretum non libertas
difficulty cannot be exponential because once every fab in the world is fully occupied making asics the increase will be linear until fujian can be paved over to build new fabs.

the marginal cost of mining is less than the average cost.  in the near term, while admittedly they have not shipped, cointerra for january delivery sold for 6k USD, 2TH/s, 1200w.   
$3/d for power, and 23 coins in 180 days at 25% difficulty increment (which is pessimistic, as per above), so $283/coin all-in on 6 month amortization.

In the long run, these chips will tend to the $10 range, and hardware will be inconsequential, but by then, say 9 months from now, the yield on 1200w will be about 0.01 btc, so costs are pretty constant until there is a big tech change, say 14nm process with merged litecoin a la gridchip.
legendary
Activity: 1988
Merit: 1012
Beyond Imagination
http://bitcoinwisdom.com/bitcoin/difficulty

The next difficulty jump is projected to be at least 30%. If this rate holds, a mining rig can only mine 3.33x coins of its first 10 day period income during its lifetime

Currently a BFL 230GH miner cost $4255 for immediate delivery (they are changing their pricing continuously), it will generate 0.0646 bitcoin per day, and 0.646 bitcoin during its first 10 day period. So it will only generate 3.33x0.646=2.15 coins during its lifetime, and that put the cost of each coin at $1979 without even the electricity cost

On CEX.IO, 230GH cost $8919 at today's bitcoin exchange rate of $843, it is more expensive than BFL but without the maintenance overhead

So the mining cost suggest a coin through mining will cost at least $1979 if the difficulty jumps 30% each time, and $1300 if the difficulty jumps 20% each time


One year ago I have projected that eventually the mining cost will drop close to the electricity cost after the market is saturated by ASIC miners, just like GPU era. But that is under an assumption that most of the miners will eventually ROI and use their rig as an electricity to bitcoin converter

The current situation is totally different, it seems we are still in the middle of this technology transition and at the same time the public awareness of bitcoin has greatly increased

The deployment of ASIC miners are 10 times faster then I projected, and this caused the exchange rate to lag behind. If the exchange rate is the market's valuation about bitcoin, and the mining cost is the bitcoin enthusiasts' valuation about bitcoin, now it is like a period when some miners were mining at a loss (The end of 2011)



sr. member
Activity: 322
Merit: 250
- BTC's a day: 4582    (average time for the past few months to solve 2016 blocks = 11 days.  2016*25 / 11 = 4582 )
Thats a really good point. With the increasing hashrates the actual production is about 25% above target.

I don't know.. what do you think about this calculation guys ? Even with 5w per Gh it's only 47,14 $ per BTC
Sounds pretty plausible to me. But the power cost is a fairly insignificant part of the cost nowadays.

I'll do some more calculations and try to calculate the propotional hardware costs per BTC (with an uderlying assumption I don't know yet, any ideas?) 
Most basic assumption is that the hardware industry will naturally expand to the point were producing a BTC costs nearly as much as it is worth. And while that is (still) true for scrypt mining were hardware is readily available its more complicated since bitcoin hardware is a pre-order market nowadays.
Anyway, to get an estimate about hardware shipments check this thread.
newbie
Activity: 38
Merit: 0
I just made a calculation:

Assumptions:

- BTC's a day: 4582    (average time for the past few months to solve 2016 blocks = 11 days.  2016*25 / 11 = 4582 )

- Gh/s acutally used: 15.000.000

-power cost: 0,12$ kw

- Questionable assumption: 1w per GH (is this realistic, what do you think? Knc Jupiter with 3.0 Th/s has 0.7w per GH and there is probably a lot of old hardware in use, so 1w per GH is maybe far too low)

15.000.000 GH * 1W/GH= 15.000.000 w/h * 24 = 360.000.000 w/day =  360.000 kw/day

360.000 kw/day *0,12$ per kw = 43.200$ for power per day

43.200$ / 4582 = 9.43$ per BTC (only power costs)

I don't know.. what do you think about this calculation guys ? Even with 5w per Gh it's only 47,14 $ per BTC

I'll do some more calculations and try to calculate the propotional hardware costs per BTC (with an uderlying assumption I don't know yet, any ideas?) 
legendary
Activity: 3682
Merit: 1580
Where did the op get the 5000 figure from? The idea goes that you have a block every 10 minutes and 25 new bitcoins are created as a result. So 25*6*24 = 3600 new coins a day.
hero member
Activity: 504
Merit: 502
Butt, Rival's numbers are for immediate delivery of equipment from E-bay though and this is likely skewing the estimate to the high end because most equipment is purchased direct but with a delay, immediate delivery comes at a premium.  A better price estimate would be derived from a survey of manufacturers and that might lower the estimate by half.  Rival can you get a hold of such numbers?

I found it almost impossible to assign any realistic value to units which were pre-ordered. If you don't know when you will get your gear, you have no idea how many coins you might derive from it. A few weeks either way can have a huge effect. Given the fact that units are rarely available for immediate delivery from manufacturers, I was forced to look at the secondary market so as to at least glean some data which could be useful. It would be nice to try and derive a coefficient that could be applied to the numbers to determine cost/hash of deliveries from manufacturers. I just have no idea how it could be done. Consider BFL. The first to get units made a killing, the last ones got killed. Not sure how to average that, or if the numbers would tell us anything we don't already know intuitively.

edit: After additional consideration, I would suggest that the secondary market may be a roughly accurate average of the gh/s cost of delivered pre-order units, and not 50% as Impaler posits. The fact that they exist at all and are not pre-orders pretty much temporally locks them.

sr. member
Activity: 407
Merit: 250
A reward changed from 50 coins per block to 25.

D'oh! Smiley
full member
Activity: 224
Merit: 100
Look at the blue line (or pink) in the first picture, in November 2012.  It doubles, and I don't understand why.
A reward changed from 50 coins per block to 25.
sr. member
Activity: 407
Merit: 250
It's a pink line actually. It's "amortized cost", means "what price should I set to cover my videocard's cost in 1 year".

Look at the blue line (or pink) in the first picture, in November 2012.  It doubles, and I don't understand why.

legendary
Activity: 1988
Merit: 1012
Beyond Imagination
That's the question always lingering in many people's minds, is Mining Bitcoin really sustainable without constant major price rises ? for example if the price lingers around $1000-$1200 how long before mining collapses ?

IMO, the high cost of mining created a barrier for entry, so that any new comers will have to buy directly from the exchange, thus support the exchange rate

The large miners see the incoming huge demand for bitcoins, and they know it has a limited supply, they only need to hold all the mined coins to make sure the exchange rate kept stable. The capital and operating cost can be financed through loan, since the return will be huge after a couple of years. If they cash out the coins immediately, it defeats the very purpose of mining
full member
Activity: 224
Merit: 100
Nice charts. 

Is the Avalon #2 miner the most efficient on the Hash/Watt basis?
Nope. It has typical efficient for this moment.
According to this page, the next generation of ASICs will be 5 times more effective than avalons.

What is your assumed electricity cost?
$0.12 per KW/h. See computation parameters

Why would blue line on the first picture double, with difficulty almost the same?
It's a pink line actually. It's "amortized cost", means "what price should I set to cover my videocard's cost in 1 year".

sr. member
Activity: 407
Merit: 250
Nice charts. 

Is the Avalon #2 miner the most efficient on the Hash/Watt basis?
What is your assumed electricity cost?
Why would blue line on the first picture double, with difficulty almost the same?
full member
Activity: 224
Merit: 100
sr. member
Activity: 407
Merit: 250
I've been saying for a year that ASICs have set off a kind of mining bubble, in which miners just pocket the BTC they produce as their profits which dries up the supply on the exchanges and inflates the price.  Eventually the system will break down when the marginal (electric) costs of mining don't even equal the profits and hash rates actually drop as a response to the overshoot.  When miners are right at the edge of profitability again they will operate like real mines, they will sell everything daily into the exchanges and this will drive down values as happened after the 2011 crash.  The market now can not absorb 5k coins per day being liquidated, that would drain all the USD off the exchanges in a week flat.  The present market is maintained by the bottling up of the newly mined coin stream by ASIC hoarders.

Excellent post. 

This current mining profitability is maintaned by two more factors:

-It's not easy to get mining hardware, you have to wait months.  (In the GPU era bubble, you could start mining in hours)
-most famous exchange does not do USD withdrawals, yet all the other exchanges seem to follow their price.  This also relieves the selling pressure.

When those two things are resolved, things will get interesting. 
sr. member
Activity: 826
Merit: 250
CryptoTalk.Org - Get Paid for every Post!
We have speculated that mining could be and likely is overshooting so any estimate based on assumptions that miners will remain profitable is highly suspect.  If that was the basis for your estimate then I'm declaring it a worthless estimate.

I would be much more inclined to believe estimates derived directly from Hash-rates, observing the raw hash rate increase and comparing that to the average cost of equipment over the period to get an idea how much money was spent of equipment over the period.  I'll do that right now in fact.

Over December we saw ~6 million GH/s added to the network, Rival provides a price estimate of $41 and $36 per GH/s in early a late December respectively, I'll go with a round $40 to be conservative.  This would thus total to $240 million dollars of Mining equipment purchase in the month of December. 

Butt, Rival's numbers are for immediate delivery of equipment from E-bay though and this is likely skewing the estimate to the high end because most equipment is purchased direct but with a delay, immediate delivery comes at a premium.  A better price estimate would be derived from a survey of manufacturers and that might lower the estimate by half.  Rival can you get a hold of such numbers?

Compared to the value of mined BTC, if we estimate 4k coins a day and ~$900 then you would be at roughly $100 million gross mining revenue per month, which looks to be at least in the ball park of whats spent on mining. 

This is perhaps unsurprising at first if we naively assume that the sale of coins are what fund mining activity, then naturally if X revenue is generated from coin sales by miners then they will reinvest X in mining equipment.  But I do not think that very many newly mined coins are actually sold, the markets churn over a small number of high-velocity coins while most new coins go immediately into the miners personal stash.  Mining expenditures are largely new investments made with outside money, not with revenue from coin sales.  This is why I think the situation will inevitably end in overshoot as miners lose profitability and begin to release their hoarded coins to pay ongoing operating costs.
sr. member
Activity: 322
Merit: 250
The actually sales volume of all the mining equipment would be a very interesting figure to know though, can you explain your steps to calculate it?
Its basicly a fairly simple guestimate. If mining equipment is expected to actually return more money than it costs than obviously the hardware market as a total has to be smaller than the value of bitcoins mined. If it is expected to return less than the money invested for mining equipment on average than the hardware market is actually bigger than the BTC earnings. Currently the chances to break even on mining are nearly none existant unless you get a batch 1 preorder that actually ships on time.
Another way to get to the same result is to check the total network hashing speed in GH/s and multiply that by the average cost per GH/s. This is imho a pretty dangerous situation, if too many miners have to sell BTC to recoup at least a part of their investment this could create a negative spiral which in turn cause the hardware manufacturers to go bankrupt (since lower prices will make mining hadware less atractive). Which could negativly effect the bitcoin economy as a whole (companies going bankrupt could cause other other unrelated companies, such as merchants, from even touching bitcoin with a 10ft stick).
Not saying it will happen. But its i risk i wouldnt underestimate.
sr. member
Activity: 260
Merit: 251
don't trust the blockchain.info electricity estimates. They're still based on GPU mining AFAIK. It's reasonable to assume a current gen ASIC consume 1 watt per GH. From there, the rest of the math is fairly straightforward and you'll realize that the vast majority of cost for mining a bitcoin is capital, and not operation.
legendary
Activity: 4466
Merit: 3391
I found the following figures:

"According to Blockchain, over the last 24 hours Bitcoin miners used an estimated 135,950.77 megawatt hours of electricity." That is round about $195.000 a day. Daily there are 5.000 new Bitcoins mined. So that would equal to $39 cost of electricity per Bitcoin. Far away from current market price. Sure, to "produce" a Bitcoin you need hardware.

How did you get the $195,000 number?  That's 0.143 cents per kilowatt hour, which is about 100 times cheaper than average price of electricity in the US.

I doubt blockchain.info's estimate is real. ASICs hardly use any electricity at all.
hero member
Activity: 504
Merit: 502
The actual answer is here:

October 24, 2013: 553Gh/s gets 1 BTC/day @ a cost of $12,366 (9.25 BFL singles from ebay) ($22.36/Gh/s)
October 26, 2013: 778Gh/s gets 1 BTC/day @ a cost of $16,900 (13 BFL singles from ebay) ($21.72/Gh/s)
November 05 2013: 1016Gh/s gets 1 BTC/day @ a cost of $22,013 (17 BFL singles from ebay) ($21.66/Gh/s)
November 17, 2013: 1212Gh/s gets 1 BTC/day @ a cost of $42,420 (20.2 BFL singles from ebay) ($35/Gh/s)
November 30, 2013: 1420Gh/s gets 1 BTC/day @ a cost of $82,833 (24 BFL singles from ebay)  ($58/Gh/s)
December 11,2013: 1800Gh/s gets 1 BTC/Day @ a cost of $75,000 (30 BFL singles from ebay) ($41/Gh/s)
December 21, 2013: 2350Gh/s gets 1 BTC/Day @ a cost of $86166 (39 BFL singles from ebay) ($36/Gh/s)

Today:

January 08, 2014: 2821Gh/s gets 1 BTC/Day@ a cost of $58500 (78 AsicMiner Cubes from ebay) ($21/Gh/s)

The tumble in asic miner unit prices over the last few weeks has made it much cheaper to get bitcoins. Since the are now several dozen cubes available I have moved over to them for the calculations, and they are fairly cheap compared to BFL units offered. Unfortunately, to run these miners you need some power supplies. In this case, add an additional 39 power supplies (corsair TX850) at a cost of $4875 and that gets you up to right at $63,000 to arm up for one BTC per day with the ASICminer cubes. That's pretty close to what you would need to spend on little singles from BFL, so it's really a wash. If the antminers become more widely available I may consider using them for pricing the next round as they are slightly cheaper currently per Gh/s. It BTC can climb back over $1000 and sustain it for a while, we could see the unit prices increase as they did before, so keep your seatbelt on, it's one big wild ride!
hero member
Activity: 686
Merit: 501
TokenUnion-Get Rewarded for Holding Crypto
I found the following figures:

"According to Blockchain, over the last 24 hours Bitcoin miners used an estimated 135,950.77 megawatt hours of electricity." That is round about $195.000 a day. Daily there are 5.000 new Bitcoins mined. So that would equal to $39 cost of electricity per Bitcoin. Far away from current market price. Sure, to "produce" a Bitcoin you need hardware.

How did you get the $195,000 number?  That's 0.143 cents per kilowatt hour, which is about 100 times cheaper than average price of electricity in the US.
sr. member
Activity: 546
Merit: 290
I just stumbled upon Satoshi's famous quote ...

"In the absence of a market to establish the price (of bitcoin, estimates) based on production cost is a good guess and a helpful service (thanks). The price of any commodity tends to gravitate toward the production cost. If the price is below cost, then production slows down. If the price is above cost, profit can be made by generating and selling more." Feb. 21, 2010 Satoshi Nakamoto

... and asked myself: What is the current cost of production of one Bitcoin?

I found the following figures:

"According to Blockchain, over the last 24 hours Bitcoin miners used an estimated 135,950.77 megawatt hours of electricity." That is round about $195.000 a day. Daily there are 5.000 new Bitcoins mined. So that would equal to $39 cost of electricity per Bitcoin. Far away from current market price. Sure, to "produce" a Bitcoin you need hardware.

So the cost of hardware is the big unknown to calculate the real cost of production. And here you - fellow Bitcoin Enthusiasts - come into play:

Do you know reliable cost figures for mining hardware like price, operating lifetime and so forth to calculate the cost to produce one Bitcoin (and therefore get comparison to the current market value of a Bitcoin)?


Thanks,

Bitone

WTF?

Here in germany 1 kilowatt hour costs 0.28 €

135,950,770 kWh x 0.28 € = 38,066,215.50 €

38 Million Euros

This means, that 1 BTC costs in Germany 7613.24 €

Did you pay only 0.002 $ per kWh???



sr. member
Activity: 370
Merit: 250
The price of any commodity tends to gravitate toward the production cost.

In Bitcoin, the difficulty provides a means to gravitate the production cost towards the price.

This.
this.

until Intel or AMD comes to play
sr. member
Activity: 308
Merit: 251
Giga
That's the question always lingering in many people's minds, is Mining Bitcoin really sustainable without constant major price rises ? for example if the price lingers around $1000-$1200 how long before mining collapses ?
legendary
Activity: 1988
Merit: 1012
Beyond Imagination
In theory, the average cost is just under 1 BTC to produce a bitcoin. That is because if it costs more than 1 BTC, then miners will stop mining, lowering the difficulty and the cost. If it costs less than 1 BTC, then more people will start mining, raising the difficulty and the cost.

In reality, it currently costs much more than 1 BTC to mine a bitcoin. It is reasonable to expect that 1 GH/s will mine no more than 0.018 BTC, yet people are paying double that for cex.io and most mining equipment.
 

There are some uncertainties: Difficulty can rise and fall. The 1GH/s hash power can mine 0.04 BTC in 3 months if the difficulty seldom changes. The current higher bidding at CEX.IO might indicate that the difficulty rise will slow down for a while
sr. member
Activity: 826
Merit: 250
CryptoTalk.Org - Get Paid for every Post!
And that part really buggers me. That basicly means the hardware business around bitcoin is actually bigger than the mining profit. And with 108k BTC mined per month that equates to like close to $100M per month (with BTC @ $900). How long can the bitcoin economy sustain such a large hardware business?

I've been saying for a year that ASICs have set off a kind of mining bubble, in which miners just pocket the BTC they produce as their profits which dries up the supply on the exchanges and inflates the price.  Eventually the system will break down when the marginal (electric) costs of mining don't even equal the profits and hash rates actually drop as a response to the overshoot.  When miners are right at the edge of profitability again they will operate like real mines, they will sell everything daily into the exchanges and this will drive down values as happened after the 2011 crash.  The market now can not absorb 5k coins per day being liquidated, that would drain all the USD off the exchanges in a week flat.  The present market is maintained by the bottling up of the newly mined coin stream by ASIC hoarders.

The actually sales volume of all the mining equipment would be a very interesting figure to know though, can you explain your steps to calculate it?
legendary
Activity: 1456
Merit: 1001
This is the land of wolves now & you're not a wolf
In theory, the average cost is just under 1 BTC to produce a bitcoin. That is because if it costs more than 1 BTC, then miners will stop mining, lowering the difficulty and the cost. If it costs less than 1 BTC, then more people will start mining, raising the difficulty and the cost.

In reality, it currently costs much more than 1 BTC to mine a bitcoin. It is reasonable to expect that 1 GH/s will mine no more than 0.018 BTC, yet people are paying double that for cex.io and most mining equipment.
 

I have wondered about this too...thanks for some clarification.   I have never mined, and don't plan to start, but I am intrigued by people that have done so, and done so successfully.
sr. member
Activity: 322
Merit: 250
In reality, it currently costs much more than 1 BTC to mine a bitcoin. It is reasonable to expect that 1 GH/s will mine no more than 0.018 BTC, yet people are paying double that for cex.io and most mining equipment.
And that part really buggers me. That basicly means the hardware business around bitcoin is actually bigger than the mining profit. And with 108k BTC mined per month that equates to like close to $100M per month (with BTC @ $900). How long can the bitcoin economy sustain such a large hardware business?
legendary
Activity: 4466
Merit: 3391
In theory, the average cost is just under 1 BTC to produce a bitcoin. That is because if it costs more than 1 BTC, then miners will stop mining, lowering the difficulty and the cost. If it costs less than 1 BTC, then more people will start mining, raising the difficulty and the cost.

In reality, it currently costs much more than 1 BTC to mine a bitcoin. It is reasonable to expect that 1 GH/s will mine no more than 0.018 BTC, yet people are paying double that for cex.io and most mining equipment.
 
member
Activity: 86
Merit: 10
$984 BFL single 50GH provide 0.018 coins per day and 0.18 coins for the first 10 day period, at 20% difficulty increase, it will mine 5x coins of the first time period during its life time, which is 0.9 coins. Even excluding all the electricity cost, it will make average coin cost $1093
If what you say is accurate, the bitcoins are undervalued presently.  I can't wait until about 18 months from now when the blockchain reward is halved.
member
Activity: 112
Merit: 10
What's a reliable mining profit calculator?

I tested a few but all give very different results.  Embarrassed
legendary
Activity: 1988
Merit: 1012
Beyond Imagination
$984 BFL single 50GH provide 0.018 coins per day and 0.18 coins for the first 10 day period, at 20% difficulty increase, it will mine 5x coins of the first time period during its life time, which is 0.9 coins. Even excluding all the electricity cost, it will make average coin cost $1093
sr. member
Activity: 410
Merit: 252
Watercooling the world of mining
Just to add my own thoughts regarding this matter.

I do not take into account the fact that most of the upcoming mining plattforms are
bound to run into deficits even if they arrive as scheduled by their developers.

The amount of money invested and payed for each bitcoin mined varys
between ~260$ and ~560$ but generally is growing as the future mining
hardware is incoming.

Almost all plattforms i have seen lately as i already said wont run significant returns
for their owners having a certain safty margin in mind.
The timeframes for running the machines profitably are very small as well.
Around 3 to 7 months are not uncommon.


I propose to hold back your investments.
The race down the fabrication with of the ASIC world is to come to a slow down
within the next few generationsas the Mining ASICs meet with the state of the industry
production fabrication withs between 20 and 14 nm.

At that point i expect a more level playfield for mining operations and more stable
envoirment reenabling mid and long term investments into the mining market.
hero member
Activity: 552
Merit: 501
I found this one much easier to use and understand: http://www.vnbitcoin.org/bitcoincalculator.php


I entered numbers for the BFL 50 GH/s Bitcoin Miner at $984. This is a stock item so there are no pre-order issues.

After playing around with the numbers, I get the following:

1. The break-even period is exquisitely sensitive to the % change in difficulty (which occurs roughly every 12 days).

2. For 15%, break-even is 150 days. For 17% it is never.

3. Average change in difficulty for each of the last 15 changes has in fact been 29% (raw data here: http://runeks.dk/bitcoin/diff.txt)

4. At that rate, total lifetime revenue is about half of capital cost. I.e. unprofitable.

Conclusion. Mining is a  guessing game because profitability depends upon future changes in difficulty which are unknowable even in the short time, let alone the long term. But at present rates of increase, it is not profitable. That said, it is hard to believe that difficulty can keep climbing at the rate it has been for the last few months. Eventually things must moderate to something more in line with Moore's law. But until then....



legendary
Activity: 947
Merit: 1042
Hamster ate my bitcoin
The price of any commodity tends to gravitate toward the production cost.

In Bitcoin, the difficulty provides a means to gravitate the production cost towards the price.

This.
legendary
Activity: 1708
Merit: 1020
http://blockchained.com/profit/
http://mining.thegenesisblock.com/

Difficult to say because by far the largest part is the hardware. The current price 800-1000$ is not too far off imho.
member
Activity: 112
Merit: 10
I found this Bitcoin mining profitability calculator: http://www.bitcoinx.com/profit/

Looks interesting although I don't have a clue if it's accurate.
anu
legendary
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1001
RepuX - Enterprise Blockchain Protocol
The price of any commodity tends to gravitate toward the production cost.

In Bitcoin, the difficulty provides a means to gravitate the production cost towards the price.
member
Activity: 114
Merit: 10
I just stumbled upon Satoshi's famous quote ...

"In the absence of a market to establish the price (of bitcoin, estimates) based on production cost is a good guess and a helpful service (thanks). The price of any commodity tends to gravitate toward the production cost. If the price is below cost, then production slows down. If the price is above cost, profit can be made by generating and selling more." Feb. 21, 2010 Satoshi Nakamoto

... and asked myself: What is the current cost of production of one Bitcoin?

I found the following figures:

"According to Blockchain, over the last 24 hours Bitcoin miners used an estimated 135,950.77 megawatt hours of electricity." That is round about $195.000 a day. Daily there are 5.000 new Bitcoins mined. So that would equal to $39 cost of electricity per Bitcoin. Far away from current market price. Sure, to "produce" a Bitcoin you need hardware.

So the cost of hardware is the big unknown to calculate the real cost of production. And here you - fellow Bitcoin Enthusiasts - come into play:

Do you know reliable cost figures for mining hardware like price, operating lifetime and so forth to calculate the cost to produce one Bitcoin (and therefore get comparison to the current market value of a Bitcoin)?


Thanks,

Bitone
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