The company's new machines should ship before the April 2024 Bitcoin halving.
Andrew Throuvalas3 min read
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With Bitcoin’s highly anticipated “halving” event only 6 months away, Canada-based Bitcoin mining firm Iris Energy has announced another major expansion to its computer fleet.
On Friday, the company confirmed that its total hashrate has increased by 25% from 5.6 exahashes per second (EH/s) to 7.0 EH/s, by adding 7,000 of Bitmain’s newest S21 miners to its fleet. The addition cost the company $19.6 million.
“The purchase is expected to be funded from existing capital sources, including cash in bank (~$64 million, no debt), operating cash flow and other recently disclosed funding programs,” the company said in a press release.
“Hashrate” refers to the number of hashes—or guesses—that miners can generate to solve a complex mathematical problem required to create Bitcoin’s next block. An exahash is equivalent to one quintillion hashes.
The first miners to build each block are rewarded with freshly minted BTC. The faster miners can produce hashes, the more BTC they earn, and the more revenue they generate. So increasing hashrate ups the chances that a company will win that race each time there’s a new block on the network.
Following the announcement, shares of Iris—which trade on the NASDAQ under the IREN ticker—popped 9.5%.
Back in June, Iris revealed plans to expand its capacity to 9.1 EH/s by early 2024. That target has now been bumped to 9.4 EH/s, while the firm “continues to monitor the market for additional hardware acquisition opportunities.”
After the machines ship in early 2024, miner economics are expected to drastically change in light of the April 2024 halving. The halving is a regularly scheduled event that will reduce miners’ guaranteed BTC rewards per block from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC.
On one hand, this may make mining a less sustainable business, meaning only the most cost-efficient firms will be able to compete in the industry. On the other, many view the halving as a catalyst for Bitcoin bull markets, which may ultimately make the industry more profitable in dollar-denominated terms.
Other major mining firms including Blockstream, Riot, CleanSpark, and others have announced major expansion plans this year, often with explicit reference to the Bitcoin halving. “We continue to make use of opportunities created by current market conditions to prepare for next year’s bitcoin halving,” said CleanSpark CFO Gary A. Vecchiarelli upon announcing a $9.3 million expansion in June.