Two technicians look at bitcoin mining at Bitfarms in Saint Hyacinthe, Quebec on March 19, 2018. (Photo by LARS HAGBERG/AFP via Getty Images)
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Overview
2023’s market boom was a boon for public bitcoin miners, many of which enjoyed triple-digit returns over the course of 2023. The best-performing stocks in 2023 were Marathon (591%), Bitfarms (582%), Bit Digital (553%), Cipher (546%), and Iris Energy (501%). Most importantly, these returns came after a bearish 2022 when bitcoin mining stocks fell by 78%, according to a crypto mining stock index.
Bitcoin mining stock returns in 2023
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The public bitcoin mining sector used 2023’s lofty market to raise equity, firming up their balance sheets and eliminating debt. All told, the biggest publicly traded Bitcoin miners raised $1.63 billion in equity through the first 9 months of 2023 via public sales or private placements. These miners likely sold additional equity in Q4-2023, but we won’t know exactly how much until they report end-of-year financials later this month.
Some miners, like Marathon, used the fresh capital to pay down hefty debt loads incurred when they scaled up to ride the 2021 bill run, while others used the funds to finance infrastructure expansion and new ASIC miner orders.
Public bitcoin mining sector used 2023’s lofty market to raise equity, firming up their balance sheets and eliminating debt.
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Key Background
Bitcoin’s fourth block subsidy halving is scheduled to occur in mid-April. This quadrennial event will immediately cut mining revenue in half by reducing the number of bitcoin issued per block by 50%. If it were to happen today, for example, miners would earn roughly $140,000 per block instead of the ~$280,000 they earn today from the current block reward, which includes transaction fees and newly minted bitcoins. If the price of bitcoin doubles, their revenue would stay the same.
For many miners, last year was a preparation period to gear up for what will likely be the toughest year yet in bitcoin mining, and the equity sales attest to the shifting financial management strategies that public miners are executing to adapt to current market conditions ahead of the halving. The chart below illustrates the profit squeeze that the halving will force onto miners. Using a hypothetical scenario where a miner is running 10 Antminer S19 XPs at $0.06, we look at current operating profit and operating profit if the halving were to happen tomorrow by using hashprice, a revenue measure miners use that indicates how much money they can earn per day for their compute power.
If the halving were to happen tomorrow, this hypothetical miner’s margins would shrink from 60% to 19%
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As the chart indicates, if the halving were to happen tomorrow, this hypothetical miner’s margins would shrink from 60% to 19% – a significant reduction.
It’s worth noting that this hypothetical only looks at direct operating costs with regard to power and that public miners have overhead that includes selling, general, and administrative expenses (SG&A) and other costs such as servicing debt.
Core Scientific, which recently emerged from bankruptcy, is perhaps the poster child for how debt can burden a public Bitcoin miner. Even after shaving its debt significantly in Chapter 11 restructuring, Core Scientific reported $680 million in outstanding debt in Q3-2023, with a contractual interest expense of $60 million for the first nine months of 2023 on these loans.
With Debt Out of Reach, Equity Became the Only Practical Fundraising Vehicle for Miners in 2023
Public bitcoin miners, like other publicly traded companies, can tap into debt markets or their own equity to raise capital. Equity raises have typically been the go-to financing vehicle for these companies for two reasons.
First, many financiers have been leery of lending to a sector with such a volatile market. However, in 2020, 2021, and 2022, when interest rates were practically zero, raising debt was preferable because the debt was cheaper and this strategy was non-dilutive for their shareholders.
Some of the debt raised in years past came from credit facilities, like Marathon’s $200 million facility with Silvergate Bank, which it recently wound down. Others, like Core Scientific, took on debt via convertible notes (that can be turned into equity), covenants, and ASIC miner financing loans. The latter category was typically offered by crypto-native financial firms like NYDIG, Galaxy Digital, and Foundry (among others), and they usually carried high interest rates (10-15% or higher) and were collateralized by the very ASIC miners they financed. In fact, ASIC financing deals used to make up a substantial portion of the sector’s debt. ASIC financing accounted for $47.84 million in public miner debt in 2020, $662.25 million in 2021, and $641.80 million in 2022. As a point of reference to show the high cost of this debt for miners, the Bloomberg US Corporate High Yield Bond Index paid 6.926% yield to maturity from 2020-2023.
These ASIC financing loans ended in 2022 with a wave of defaults.
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These ASIC financing loans ended in 2022 with a wave of defaults; the $277 million of confirmed defaults came from Iris Energy, Stronghold, and Greenidge.
The Federal Reserve’s rate hikes throughout 2023 moved the targeted federal funds rate from 525-550 bps, which made debt financing largely untenable, so equity sales took up virtually the entirety of the sector’s fundraising efforts.
From the end of 2022 to the end of Q3 2023, public Bitcoin miners reduced their burdens from $2.61 billion to $1.56 billion, a 40% decrease.
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Flush With Capital, Public Miners Are Sponging Away Debt, Expanding Operations
Miners first used these windfalls to shave away debt. From the end of 2022 to the end of Q3 2023, public Bitcoin miners reduced their burdens from $2.61 billion to $1.56 billion, a 40% decrease.
From Q4-2023 through the first half of 2025, public Bitcoin miners have had more than 67 EH/s worth of Bitcoin mining ASICs on order (for reference, the entire Bitcoin network currently sports 540 EH/s).
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The cash that the public Bitcoin miners raised in 2023 also went toward ASIC miner orders to pad their hashrates before the halving. From Q4-2023 through the first half of 2025, public Bitcoin miners have had more than 67 EH/s worth of Bitcoin mining ASICs on order (for reference, the entire Bitcoin network currently sports 540 EH/s). Many of these orders for 2024 and 2025 are for the latest next-generation models that are forthcoming in the new year, namely the Antminer S21 and T21 models and the Whatsminer M60 series.
Leading public miners have 1.2 gigawatt of expansion currently under development.
Forbes
Some orders will replace existing models in active facilities, but others will outfit new and under-construction facilities. Riot, for instance, ordered massive quantities of M56 and M66 rigs for its all-immersion Corsicana facility in West Texas, which it plans to begin energizing at the end of Q1 2024, and Cipher plans to fill its Black Pearl facility – a Texas Bitcoin mining farm which it recently acquired – with Antminer T21s when it is fully energized in 2025.
Leading public miners have 1.2 gigawatt of expansion currently under development (this figure includes active construction of new sites, expansion via power purchasing agreements with utilities, and pending acquisitions). This figure illustrates that collectively, these miners are building out facilities that are capable of drawing up 1.2 GW of power; for comparison, New York City requires 5.5 GW of power. Estimates for the entire Bitcoin network’s power draw, for reference, is roughly 17 GW, according to estimates from Hashrate Index;18.5 GW, according to estimates from Cambridge; or 18 GW, according to Coin Metrics.
Bulking Up For Bitcoin’s Halving, Miners Sold $1.6 Billion In Stock In 2023