Riot Financial Report Breakdown: When BTC Falls Below $74K, Miners Can't Even Cover Electricity Costs
Based on Riot Platforms' financial data, this analysis deconstructs Bitcoin mining costs into three distinct layers: electricity, operational, and accounting. At a BTC price of $67,200, a miner with modern ASICs and a $0.0667/kWh electricity rate (like in Texas) can cover its direct power cost ($64,635/BTC) for a slim profit. However, adding Riot's non-power operational expenses ($9,809/BTC) pushes the operational breakeven to ~$74,444, resulting in a loss. Further incorporating non-cash depreciation ($39,687/BTC) raises the full accounting breakeven to ~$114,130, indicating significant losses at the corporate level.
The model projects that only a BTC price of $126,000 would make mining profitable across all three layers for Riot before the next halving. This framework demonstrates that a mining operation can be cash-flow positive from electricity while remaining unprofitable from operational and accounting perspectives, highlighting the substantial gap between simply running machines and running a profitable public company. The analysis underscores that machine efficiency and electricity rates are critical, as older hardware carries a persistent cost disadvantage.
marsbit03/09 10:10