If bitcoin can’t recover $8,600 soon, bitcoin “miners” will likely find it unprofitable to keep creating the cryptocurrency, Morgan Stanley analysts said.
Bitcoin traded slightly higher near $8,200 on Thursday, according to CoinDesk. It has struggled to recover in the last few months after tumbling from a record high above $19,000 in mid-December.
“We estimate the break-even point for big mining pools should be US$8,600, even if we assume a very low electricity cost (US$0.03 kW/h),” equity analyst Charlie Chan and his team said in a Thursday note.
“Therefore, we think the Bitcoin mining hardware demand and price will decline further and affect TSMC’s wafer demand,” the report said.
Break-even points for bitcoin mining
Source: Morgan Stanley Research estimates
TSMC, or Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, on Thursday lowered its 2018 revenue guidance to 10 percent growth from 10 to 15 percent based partly on uncertainty in cryptocurrency mining demand. Morgan Stanley estimates about 10 percent of the giant Asian chipmaker’s revenue now depends on cryptocurrency mining demand.
Bitcoin “mining” uses high computing power to solve a complex mathematical equation, proving an anonymous miner used the process the network agreed upon to build the blockchain’s record of transactions. Miners then get bitcoin in reward for successfully completing the equation.
Large groups of miners, mostly in China, work together in “pools” to improve efficiency. But as more miners participate, the difficulty of the process increases.
“We think the injection of new mining capacity will further increase the mining difficulty in 2H18,” the Morgan Stanley analysts said. “Even if the Bitcoin price stays the same in 2H18, we believe mining profits would drop rapidly, according to our simulation.”
Companies that sell the specialized mining chips may have more leeway. The Morgan Stanley model estimates an application-specific integrated circuit, or asic, vendor would break even over two years if bitcoin traded near $5,000.”
Link to the source of information: www.cnbc.com