Jefferies analyst Jonathan Petersen answered the question in his Oct. 18 research report. “It’s a fair question, but upon exploration of the topic, we have observed that mining generally results in higher returns on multi-year periods of time,” Petersen wrote. His analysis showed that if someone bought a more recent mining computer, S19 Pro, at the end of 1Q20, when the market spot price for the machine was $2,410, a mine-and-hold strategy would return 1,083% vs buying and holding bitcoin, which would return 764%.
Related posts
-
Bitcoin Price Forms Bullish Symmetrical Triangle, Crypto Analyst Says Next Stop Is $100,000
Este artículo también está disponible en español. The Bitcoin price movements have recently formed a bullish... -
IBIT trading options launch, Bitcoin tap new all-time high $94k
BlackRock, the largest asset management in the world, officially launched iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT) for... -
US Space Force Major Applies for Military Advisor Position on Bitcoin Strategy
A U.S. Space Force major aims to shape defense policy by advocating a national bitcoin reserve...