While I used the A4 as an example showing the inability to fully recapture the capital investment (~$780 before going negative) as A4s are new and at the beginning of their recapture cycle, it's not limited to A4s. Simplistically, I think about it as the total number of blocks available at any time versus the total hash rate pointed at those blocks at that same time in the scrypt ecosystem affects profitability.Chris Sokolowski wrote:
I agree with you that the future outlook for profitability is not positive. The only question I have is do you know if there's any reason why net profitability (i.e. after subtracting electricity costs) for an A4 would go negative? The only way I could see that occur if if there was some more efficient miner, and as far as I know, there is nothing better planned at the moment.
Using the same difficulty adjustment, a used Titan purchased on ebay for $1800 (hashing at 280MH) would go negative even quicker and recover even less capital due to higher power costs. All scrypt hardware is going to experience rapid depreciation over the next X months for each month that A4s continue to ship in high volume. It's ironic that the A4s are cannibalizing their own profitability as their numbers grow because we're in a zero sum game right now.
The good news is that Prohashing is the dealer/house - you guys will be fine! Really, really glad you're here and squeezing out every bit of diminishing profitability per miner. From your perspective, the total miner earnings are not dropping as you reflect the market value of the coins being mined at any moment in the zero sum part of the game (mining). However, as more miners and more hashrate are pointed at those fixed number of blocks, the earnings per miner can only go down in the absence of more blocks or an increase of the value of the blocks in the scrypt ecosystem.