Bitcoin Halving is Close: What About BTC Miners? What Should the BTC Price Be to Prevent Them From Collapsing?

The Bitcoin (BTC) halving, a major event that will cut miners' primary source of income in half, is just around the corner. Despite this daunting prospect, analysts suggest that larger publicly traded miners are well-equipped not only to survive the halving but also to thrive.

β€œWe believe a Bitcoin price above $60,000-$65,000 means halving risk is eliminated for nearly all public miners,” John Todaro, an analyst at Needham, said in a note to clients.

Currently, the cost for miners to mine a single Bitcoin ranges from $36,000 to $52,700. Despite Bitcoin's recent decline, BTC is still trading above $60,000. β€œWith Bitcoin trading at all-time highs, miners are seeing attractive margins,” Todaro added.

For margins to be significantly compressed, Bitcoin prices must fall below $50,000 or the hash rate must rise significantly to 800 EH+. The hash rate, currently around 623 and measured in exahashes, determines the mining difficulty of the Bitcoin network, the higher the rate, the greater the cost for miners.

β€œThe large publicly traded miners are doing much better right now than they have in previous cycles,” said Mike Colonnese, an analyst at HC Wainwright.

β€œThey have much stronger cash balances, they're increasing their Bitcoin reserves, there's a lot more liquidity going into this halving. In addition, a lot of the larger companies are placing these large buy orders with Bitmain and MicroBT to really increase their fleet efficiencies to reduce operating costs.” β€œ

*This is not investment advice.

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