Looking at my previous model, given a steady difficulty increase, the total number of bitcoins mined looks asymptotic, which is really weird, to see the reward of 10 GHs reach 0.01 BTC per 14 days
But that's what the calcs show, and plugging in 3,300 MHs,
at 5% diff re-targeted at 14 day periods, yields 348 BTC in a year, and only 417 four years later.
Not sure that is the best premise to use. Perhaps you should review your calculus and differential equations for your next financial modeling.
I'd be interested in which premise
you could come up with for this situation. As you can see, I'm doing a manual step calculation here, not an integral function.
And looking at those charts, since the crash, the difficulty has been climbing at reasonably steady rate of about 4.895% per retarget, so my assumption is pretty close.
Actually, if you look carefully I NEVER take the value of bitcoin into consideration, beside what I can get Today in terms of Coins or Hardware. It's as if you won a contest and got to choose between 1000 BTC or a 8.2 GH/s FPGA machine.
Another potential flaw in your logic.
Like a gold mine which produces a commodity but has input costs, like fuel and trucks, denominated in a different currency; the
FPGA machine has operational costs that are fiat currency denominated and must be born by someone and therefore has opportunity cost even if you can have those costs born by someone besides you.The cost of electricity in a year for that scenario (using $0.10 / KWhr), is $356.
But that assumption is covered here:
This calculation is assuming:
- [...]
- No Electricity cost
- [...]
The FPGA machine also likely has an expected salvage value just like the used dumptrucks and gold mine would after the asset has been depleted. You fail to take into account these calculations with the discounted future cash flows.
That is true, but since the value of bitcion mining hardware is tied to how many bitcoins it can mine, that value is very low at the end of a year, and it's simply impossible to predict it's value retention. If
you have a suggestion, I would love to hear it and take it into account here.
But unlike a gold mine the FPGA machine has alternate uses that could possibly generate more revenue than the value of generated bitcoins and use that revenue to purchase bitcoins (this ties in with my earlier post about difficulty; miners who can generate more value from their processing power from an alternate activity will reallocate processing power from bitcoin mining to activity X).
Please name
one use of the FPGA that would yield more bitcoins than mining. If you are just
predictiong that there
may be a use some time in the future, then that is an even harder guess to make than the original question I posed.
You have also failed to take into consideration any tax implications; For example, 179 deductions for hardware, deductions for electricity, capital gains, etc.
I would like to point out that there are no set Tax rules for Bitcoin yet, but if we use them as investment options, as most people will probably do, then you bring up a VERY good point relating to
hardware/electricity deductions.
Providing that Bitcoin succeeds (if it doesn't, then you're no better off if you'd bought bitcoins outright), then you make back the value of the hardware when you realize your investment by converting to fiat and subtracting the cost of hardware from the taxes you owe on your capital gains.
Brilliant