This is the second article in a two part series comparing the Q3 2022 performance numbers of Bitfarms (BITF), Hive Blockchain (HIVE), Hut 8 (HUT), Marathon Digital (MARA) and Riot Blockchain (RIOT). This article covers the Bitcoin mining costs per company, year-to-date production costs by EH/s and balance sheet fundamentals.
Read: Ranking the top five Bitcoin miners: Part I
The cost of mining a Bitcoin is fundamental to any miner analysis. Over Q3, profit margins began to squeeze even further as Bitcoin’s price remained deflated and difficulty began to creep upwards. Of the miners surveyed, Riot Blockchain produced the cheapest Bitcoin at an all-in cash price of $11,020 per coin with Hive Blockchain a little higher at $12,916 per coin.
(Physical ‘cash costs’ are taken from the recent quarterly reportings, while non-cash items such as depreciation, stock compensation and impairment charges are ignored. I have also utilized segmental reporting where miners are producing revenues and costs for services other than self-mining. The gross mining profit predominantly takes into account the energy cost of mining and is therefore a useful comparator for mining operations that are effectively occurring in different continents).
With the current price of Bitcoin currently around $17,000 per coin, over $3,000 (15%) less than the reporting period, it’s going to be a challenging time for many Bitcoin miners, particularly Hut 8 and Marathon Digital, to keep their physical cash costs within this figure.
A miner is only as strong as its balance sheet allows. Here, we look at a few metrics to better understand public miners positions based on their equity marketcap, assets, liabilities and so on.
The first metric, the current ratio, also known as the liquidity ratio, measures a company’s ability to pay short-term obligations or those due within one year. It provides investors and analysts the ability to interpret how a company can maximize the current assets on its balance sheet to satisfy its current debt and other payables by the current assets, i.e. those assets that can be liquidated into cash within the next 12 months.
Hut 8 has a very positive ratio and can cover its current liabilities by a factor greater than nine. On initial analysis, Marathon Digital looks to have reasonable liquidity levels, but they currently have two loans totalling $100 million leveraged by Bitcoin. As the value of Bitcoin has been dropping since the last quarterly update, more Bitcoin will become leveraged and therefore restricted in its use.
As highlighted in the first article, Bitfarms debt levels are higher than many other miners, but they are currently making strides to reduce the levels which should help to improve their balance sheet position.
Hut 8 has a significantly lower Enterprise Value (EV)–a metric that defines an amount which represents the entire cost of the company in case some investor intends to acquire 100% of it–than marketcap, a positive indicator. Marathon Digital has over $800 million of debt on the balance sheet and has an Enterprise Value of $1.47 billion, significantly higher than its market capitalization of $726 million.