Bitcoin (BTC) ASIC miners — machines optimized for the only goal of mining Bitcoin — are at the moment promoting at bottom-of-the-barrel costs not seen since 2020 and 2021, in what’s being considered as one other signal of a deepened crypto bear market.
According to the newest knowledge from Hashrate Index, essentially the most environment friendly ASIC miners, these producing at the least one terahash per 38 joules of vitality, have seen their costs fall 86.82% from Could. 7, 2021 peak of $119.25 per terahash right down to $15.71 as of Dec. 25.
Miners in these class embrace Bitmain’s Antminer S19 and MicroBTC’s Whatsminer M30s.
The identical assertion holds true for the mid-tier machines, with costs now averaging out at $10.23 after falling an enormous 89.36% from its peak value of $96.24 on Could. 7, 2021.
Nevertheless, the least environment friendly machines, ones that require greater than 68 Joules per terahash, are actually priced at $4.72, a 91% drop from their peak value of $52.85. The final time it was priced close to this was round Nov. 5, 2020.

The autumn in costs has largely been attributed to giant Bitcoin mining firms which have struggled to stay worthwhile all through the bear market, with many both submitting for Chapter 11 chapter, taking on debt or promoting their BTC holdings and tools in order to stay afloat.
Among the many corporations to have accomplished that embrace Core Scientific, Marathon Digital, Riot Blockchain, Bitfarms and Argo Blockchain.
Associated: Bitcoin miner outflow ratio hits 6-month high in new threat to BTC price
However the steep value fall has been met with some eager consumers. Amongst these embrace many Russian-based mining services like BitRiver, that are capable of capitalize on relatively low electricity costs, with some up-to-date {hardware} able to mining 1 BTC at about $0.07 per kilowatt-hour within the energy-rich nation.
Whereas it’s onerous to foretell what value route ASIC miners will head towards subsequent, Nico Smid of Digital Mining Options pointed out in a Dec. 21 tweet that ASIC miner costs bottomed at Bitcoin’s final halving cycle in Could. 11, 2020 and moved up aggressively shortly after — one thing which might play out in Bitcoin’s subsequent halving cycle which is anticipated to happen on April 20, 2024.
