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Good Time to Buy Crypto Mining Stocks, Says DA Davidson as It Slashes Hashrate Forecasts

There's now major upside to crypto mining stocks, even with significantly lowered earnings and hashrate projections.

Updated May 11, 2023, 6:48 p.m. Published Jul 1, 2022, 6:00 p.m.
Crypto mining stocks have lost roughly half of their value in the past month. (Sandali Handagama for CoinDesk)
Crypto mining stocks have lost roughly half of their value in the past month. (Sandali Handagama for CoinDesk)

D.A. Davidson sees a buying opportunity in the current crisis among crypto miners, according to a Friday research note from the investment bank.

Crypto mining stocks have lost about half of their value in the past month because a major fall in the price of bitcoin and ether has slashed their profit margins.

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Access to capital is "all but gone," such that Davidson senior research analyst Christopher Brendler slashed hashrate expectations to only include "current, funded orders" of mining application-specific integrated circuits (ASIC), in his note. Most publicly listed miners cash is made up of "hodled" bitcoin, i.e., crypto they mine and hold on their balance sheets, such that many have seen their treasuries dwindle along with profitability, according to Davidson.

As a result, miners have started selling off their bitcoin holdings to keep their operations going and service their debt. Expansion plans have been put on hold and "dozens of miners are already missing payments on previous rig orders and stand to lose huge deposits," Brendler wrote.

But markets have overpriced these risks, and mining stocks are "actually super attractive," said the analyst, outlining several reasons for optimism in the upcoming quarter. "Even after crushing earnings estimates, there is still more than 100% [upside potential] to our new (much lower) price targets (based on ~5x 2023 EBITDA)," he wrote.

As smaller miners without economies of scale are unable to keep their operations going, competition on the network is dropping, which in turn lowers the cost of mining bitcoin and protects gross margins. A major drop in the price of ASICs could mean that manufacturers are more lenient with payments and that fears of "broken orders" turn out to be overblown.

Marathon Digital (MARA), one of the largest publicly listed miners, is the only firm analyzed by D.A. Davidson that could still struggle to pay for its orders. The investment bank had named the firm its top mining pick for 2022. Earlier this week, MARA said a June 11 storm left its facility in Hardin, Montana, without power, which is likely to be a blow to its monthly hashrate.

Compared to a June 6 note, D.A. Davidson increased its 2022 upside expectations for Core Scientific (CORZ) and Riot Blockchain (RIOT) to 355% and 189%, respectively, and decreased its forecast for Marathon, Hut 8 (HUT), Argo Blockchain (ARBK) and Stronghold Digital Mining (SDIG) to 228%, 175%, 121% and 81%, respectively.

Read more: Crypto Miners Face Margin Calls, Defaults as Debt Comes Due in Bear Market


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Consensus Hong Kong 2026 exhibition floor packed with visitors.

Crypto's role in payments for AI, regulatory changes and the digital asset market dominated conversations on the ground.

What to know:

  • Speakers at CoinDesk's Consensus Hong Kong conference said crypto and stablecoins are likely to become the default payment tools for autonomous AI agents in an emerging "machine economy."
  • Market participants warned that bitcoin, which has already dropped nearly $30,000 in a month, may fall further, with $50,000 seen as the level to watch.
  • Hong Kong regulators are pressing ahead with crypto rules even as others wait to see how U.S. legislation develops.