Public mining companies are feeling the heat—Q2 2025 numbers just dropped, and the pure cash outlay per Bitcoin hit around $74,600. That's what it takes just to keep the rigs running and the lights on. But here's where it gets messier: throw in depreciation on all that hardware, plus stock-based comp for employees, and suddenly you're staring at a total production cost hovering near $137,800 per coin. The gap between those two figures? That's the invisible weight dragging on balance sheets. For context, this isn't just an accounting quirk—it reflects the brutal economics of industrial-scale mining when equipment burns out faster than expected and talent demands equity. Anyone tracking miner profitability needs to watch both numbers, not just the headline cash figure.
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MetaverseLandlord
· 1h ago
The gap between 74,600 and 137,800, that's the real killer... No wonder these big miners are all scrambling.
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ProposalManiac
· 1h ago
The gap of over 60,000 between 74,600 and 137,800 is, to put it bluntly, the current governance dilemma in mining economics—the cost structure is poorly designed. There is no effective incentive mechanism to regulate hardware depreciation, leaving too much power in the hands of the mining companies. There are lessons from history; just look at how traditional industries were swallowed up by cost black holes.
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ImaginaryWhale
· 1h ago
74,600 vs 137,800, the price difference is really outrageous... It's tough times for miners.
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WalletDoomsDay
· 1h ago
74,600 vs 137,800, that's almost double the difference? This gap is really outrageous, no wonder the miners are all complaining about being broke.
Public mining companies are feeling the heat—Q2 2025 numbers just dropped, and the pure cash outlay per Bitcoin hit around $74,600. That's what it takes just to keep the rigs running and the lights on. But here's where it gets messier: throw in depreciation on all that hardware, plus stock-based comp for employees, and suddenly you're staring at a total production cost hovering near $137,800 per coin. The gap between those two figures? That's the invisible weight dragging on balance sheets. For context, this isn't just an accounting quirk—it reflects the brutal economics of industrial-scale mining when equipment burns out faster than expected and talent demands equity. Anyone tracking miner profitability needs to watch both numbers, not just the headline cash figure.