GPU miners left searching for profit post Merge

THE BLOCKОпубліковано о 2022-09-16Востаннє оновлено о 2022-09-16

Анотація

Miners searching for new blockchains in the wake of Ethereum’s Merge are struggling as intense competition for blocks reduces profitability.

Miners searching for new blockchains in the wake of Ethereum’s Merge are struggling as intense competition for blocks reduces profitability.
With Ethereum’s move away from proof-of-work based GPU mining to a proof-of-stake based consensus mechanism, many of the miner operators who formerly supported the world’s second-largest blockchain network are moving to other PoW networks like ETC and RVN.
But with the eager embrace of new miners to these networks comes a rise in block difficulty that, at current market conditions and energy costs, is making it difficult for GPU miners to turn a profit, according to Ben Gagnon, chief mining officer at bitcoin miner Bitfarms (BITF).
“GPU #mining is dead less than 24 hours after the #merge,” Gagnon tweeted, adding that three of the largest chains that utilize the mining method offer negligible profits and that “the only coins showing profit have no marketcap or liquidity.”
Rising hashrates, falling profits
As the hash difficulty of networks like ETC and RVN continues to rise, profit among competing miners has driven down potential rewards. On ETC block rewards fell from a 24 hour average of around 58 cents to just over 1 cent, while rewards for blocks on RVN fell from a 24 hour average of $1.77 to just over 4 cents in more recent hours according to Minerstat data.
“Even running new generation hardware at sub 3 cent power is not profitable on ETC now,” tweeted Ethan Vera, COO of Luxor, which runs an Ethereum mining pool.
Without a profitable network to mine, as many as 20% to 30% of miners have simply shut down operations according to Vera.
Vera had previously estimated that only miners contributing around 100 terahash per second to the Ethereum network would find a home on other blockchains, citing a need for state-of-the-art hardware and low electricity prices to remain competitive.
Now, it would appear that even the latest hardware rigs and cut-rate energy costs may not be enough to turn a profit on networks like ETC, where as much as a 280% rise in hash rates occurred over the last 24 hours.

Пов'язані матеріали

TechFlow Intelligence Bureau: Anthropic IPO Odds Exceed 80%, Iran Closes Strait of Hormuz Again, Triggering Oil Price Volatility

**Market Digest** **AI & Tech:** Anthropic is widely expected to announce an IPO before November 2026, raising questions about balancing its trillion-dollar valuation ambitions with its core "AI safety" mission. Brands are increasingly adopting AI-generated virtual influencers for marketing. Cloudflare introduced temporary accounts for AI agents to ease automation workflows. **Infrastructure & Hardware:** Google's IPv6 traffic surpassed 50%, marking a major internet milestone. Goldman Sachs warned that massive projected AI capital expenditure ($5.3T) is approaching credit saturation limits, potentially curbing the "AI arms race." **Space & Robotics:** SpaceX's IPO saw a historic $370M retail buying frenzy in three days. Hyundai Motor Group plans to acquire full ownership of Boston Dynamics. Elon Musk speculated about future "septillion-dollar" investments in antimatter for interstellar travel. **Energy & Geopolitics:** Iran's military announced another closure of the strategic Strait of Hormuz, accusing Israel of violating a ceasefire, causing oil market volatility. However, ship-tracking data indicated some traffic continued. Concurrently, Iran resumed crude loadings at Kharg Island, potentially releasing up to 20 million barrels to the market. **Finance & Macro:** A European CLO (collateralized loan obligation) experienced its first post-2008-crisis-era equity tranche default, raising alarms in credit markets. Nomura warned that new Federal Reserve Chair Wash's perceived hawkish debut speech could signal a significant policy shift. **The Undercurrent:** Seemingly disparate events—the Strait of Hormuz tension, the European CLO default, and warnings on AI spending—point to a tightening of global liquidity and rising marginal costs across energy, credit, and tech investment. Meanwhile, capital continues chasing grand narratives like space exploration and advanced AI, highlighting a divergence where old-world leverage frays as new-world stories grow more ambitious.

marsbit3 год тому

TechFlow Intelligence Bureau: Anthropic IPO Odds Exceed 80%, Iran Closes Strait of Hormuz Again, Triggering Oil Price Volatility

marsbit3 год тому

Торгівля

Спот
Ф'ючерси
活动图片