With hashes and hedges, power-hungry crypto miners court
investors
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[December 10, 2019] By
Tom Wilson
LONDON (Reuters) - The old image of bitcoin
miners is of young techies in their bedrooms, hunched over laptops that
solve maths puzzles to earn new coins. Now they're more likely to be
savvy startups with ultra-high-speed chips and massive, power-guzzling
machines.
And, in a new development, they're beginning to look to financial
derivatives to hedge against the wild swings in their electricity needs
that can turn profits to dust.
The growth of a market for such tools could accelerate investment in
cryptocurrency mining, originally the preserve of lone enthusiasts but
now a capital-intensive industry that is expected to see growing demand
for digital coins.
Crypto miners must draw on increasingly large amounts of computing power
as they compete against others to solve the complex mathematical
equations to build the blockchain and earn rewards in the form of new
digital coins.
Startups have largely been defenseless against changes in so-called "hashrate"
- in short, a fluctuating measure of the processing power of the entire
bitcoin network that dictates how much power miners need to produce new
coins.
A spike in hashrate means more electricity is required, ramping up
production costs and eating into eventual profits of coins sold. This
wildcard could become a major obstacle for startups to attract
much-needed investment from institutions and markets.
The answer, seven cryptocurrency miners and industry players told
Reuters, are derivatives that allow miners to hedge the hashrate. In
theory, that would give clearer projections of cashflow - a prerequisite
for would-be investors.
The miners and crypto traders, spread from the United States and Canada
to Britain and Hong Kong, said a market for such products, though in a
very early form, was emerging and would grow in importance.
"The trend in hashrate is upwards. Unless miners increase production,
they will get fewer bitcoin with the same power," said Michel Rauchs,
author of a Cambridge university study on cryptocurrency miners.
"With hashrate derivatives, they can price in risk."
London-based DAG Global, which pitches itself as a cryptocurrency
merchant bank, said miners were showing strong interest in the firm's
products for hedging hashrates.
"As the hashrate changes, you can go from being profitable to losing
money very quickly," said Robert Andersen, who leads DAG's digital asset
sales. "The contract insures you against that. It's like insurance, and
for that you pay a premium."
Another firm, crypto trader GSR, said it has been working on similar
products but, given the early stage of the market, was not yet ready to
offer them.
"We're building products around hashrate and difficulty," said
co-founder Richard Rosenblum.
"It's going to take more than a few months for there to be significant
liquidity," he said, cautioning that a market could take a few years to
develop.
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An employee works on Bitcoin mining computer as a PC screen shows
the fluctuations in Bitcoin exchange rates at Bitminer Factory in
Florence, Italy, April 6, 2018. REUTERS/Alessandro Bianchi/File
Photo
And for sure, the market is at a very early stage. Firm figures are hard
to come by, but some crypto players say it likely totals around $50-$100
million dollars a year.
Click here https://tmsnrt.rs/2sBLQwV for an interactive graphic.
WINNING OVER INVESTORS
For traditional investors, hunting high-yielding returns in an era of
ultra-low interest rates, crypto miners could offer a tempting
proposition.
With bitcoin trading at around $7,500, the 1,800 bitcoin that can be
produced on any given day equates to an annual market of around $5
billion a year.
And many investors want a slice.
In an major example of a crypto mining company going public, last month
Chinese giant Canaan launched a $90 million initial public offering on
the Nasdaq, valuing the firm at around $2 billion.
While this is an indication of capital market appetite, Canaan is one of
only a handful of giant, global crypto miners. Many others are smaller
outfits that would likely have to work harder to convince investors they
can manage their risks.
Still, said Marco Krohn, co-founder of Hong Kong-based Genesis Mining,
which produces bitcoin from Iceland to Kazakhstan, hundreds of millions
of investment dollars could be up for grabs.
"You need to leverage the traditional financial markets - and these
people ask questions. They tend to be risk averse."
To attract such investors, mining firms told Reuters they are looking
more closely at controlling their risks - both on hashrates and prices -
via financial tools.
"The adoption of derivatives in the mining community has definitely
increased in recent months," said Kevin Shao, a manager at Canaan's
blockchain unit, speaking through an interpreter.
It may be early days for crypto mining hedging tools, but changes are
definitely afoot, said U.S. firm BitOoda, which has since April brokered
a product known as a "difficulty swap".
Sam Doctor, the company's chief strategist, said the market for such
products was growing more liquid, with the length of contracts also on
the rise.
"There are more players on the sidelines watching how these trades
perform before they take the step of trading themselves."
(Reporting by Tom Wilson; Editing by Pravin Char)
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