Bitcoin miner Bitdeer has one of the lowest “all-in mining costs” of publicly traded mining firms, which could make it more competitive following the Bitcoin halving, according to investment banking firm Benchmark.
In a March 14 analyst note viewed by Cointelegraph, analyst Mark Palmer announced that Benchmark had initiated coverage on Bitdeer Technologies Group, issuing a buy rating on the company and setting a price target of $13.
Bitdeer is a Bitcoin (BTC) mining firm spun off from Chinese parent company Bitmain, one of the world’s largest Bitcoin mining equipment manufacturers.
Palmer justified his buy rating by saying the Singapore-based company had differentiated itself with an average power cost of approximately $0.04 per kilowatt hour — one of the lowest costs among publicly traded mining firms.
The rating was also supported by the company’s expansion plans, high levels of self-mining and a recent push into the field of artificial intelligence, with its price target for 2025 doubling from its current price.
“BTDR shares are attractive, in our view, given the wide gap between their discount valuation and the company’s growth prospects,” wrote Palmer.
Bitdeer shares are currently changing hands for $6.46, down 7.6% for the week and 13.8% for the month, according to Google Finance data. At the time of publication, Bitdeer is the seventh-largest crypto miner by total markevalue, with a market capitalization of $768 million.
However, not everyone is bullish on Bitcoin mining firms, especially with the Bitcoin halving slated to occur in late-April — an event that slashes the Bitcoin-denominated rewards paid to miners in half.
On Jan. 26, Cantor Fitzgerald released a report outlining that several Bitcoin mining firms may struggle to stay in profit depending on the price of Bitcoin after the halving.
However, according to the graph provided by the firm, at Bitcoin’s current price of $67,700, none of the firms listed in the report will be in the red.
Related: Bitcoin’s rally to $72K took miner revenues to record highs
Shares in mining firms have tumbled in recent weeks, with the largest publicly-traded Bitcoin miner, Marathon Digital, and rival miner, Riot Blockchain, falling 33% and 34% in the last month.
Blockware Solutions’ head analyst Mitchell Askew told Cointelegraph on March 1 that the “most logical” explanation for tumbling miner share prices came from investors growing wary of buying shares in miners before the Bitcoin halving — an event that slashes the rewards paid to miners in half.
On March 4, Bitdeer announced the successful initial testing of SEAL01, a new 4-nanometer Bitcoin mining chip with a power efficiency of 18.1 joules per terahash, which falls below the average power efficiency of around 29 J/TH.
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