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Roughly One-Third of Bitcoin Is Controlled by a Small Cabal of Whales, According to New Study – Gizmodo

A store in Berlin, Usultan Department, in the nation of El Salvador, where cryptocurrency has been declared legal tender.Photo: Alex Pea (Getty Images)

For all the talk of democratizing finance, the vast majority of Bitcoin continues to be owned by a relative handful of investors.

As flagged by Bloomberg, newly released data by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) shows that just 10,000 individual investors control roughly one-third of the Bitcoin in circulation. This research advanced on prior studies by distinguishing between intermediaries like cryptocurrency exchanges, traders, and brokers that process vast amounts of Bitcoin for customers, versus individually-held accounts. Intermediaries control about 5.5 million Bitcoin at the end of 2020, while individuals controlled about 8.5 million Bitcoin. The top 1,000 investors, which are popularly known as whales, controlled around 3 million of Bitcoins tokens.

To put it another way, at the Jan. 1, 2021 price of $32,203.64, intermediaries controlled $177 billion in Bitcoin, while by the same metric, individuals controlled nearly $274 billion. Those 1,000 investors controlled around $96.6 billion in Bitcoin, or somewhere in the very rough ballpark of $96.6 million each on average. To get to that number does require, of course, ignoring that moving that much Bitcoin would shift the market and affect the cryptocurrencys value (a Bitcoin is worth nearly $62,400 as of Tuesday). Its also probably underestimating the degree of control, as no one has any reliable record of whos behind those 1,000 accounts.

Most likely, the people behind those accounts are individuals who managed to accrue huge stockpiles of Bitcoin early and just kept getting richer and richerpossibly by using the sheer weight of their holdings to manipulate prices. Crypto enthusiasts obviously might not care so long as their own financial trajectories mirror those of the whales on a pettier scale.

To the best of our knowledge, we have the most complete information about crypto entities that have been used in academic research up to this point, authors Igor Makarov of the London School of Economics and Antoinette Schoar of the MIT Sloan School of Management wrote in the report. Our data cover 1,043 different entities. These include 393 exchanges, 86 gambling sites, 39 on-line wallets, 33 payment processors, 63 mining pools, 35 scammers, 227 ransomware attackers, 151 dark net market places and illegal services.

G/O Media may get a commission

Identified scams and other criminal activity on the Bitcoin network are substantial, but perhaps not on the scale that authorities have claimed, according to the report.

We calculate that there are about $550 million flowing to addresses that have been identified as scams, about $16 million in identified ransom payments, and more than $1.6 billion for dark net payments and dark net services, the authors wrote. In addition, there are about $1.7 billion flowing to addresses affiliated with gambling and another $1.4 billion in mixing services.

The authors cautioned that measurement of concentration most likely is an understatement since we cannot rule out that some of the largest addresses are controlled by the same entity. As Bloomberg noted, one example is the 20,000 separate addresses controlled Satoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonym of the person or persons who developed the cryptocurrency and disappeared without withdrawing their profits. Those accounts were measured as belonging to 20,000 separate individuals by the process used in the study.

Miners, the computer farms that generate new Bitcoins, are even more concentrated by the NBER estimatewith the top 10% controlling 90% of mining capacity, and just 0.1% controlling 50%. This tracks with the increasing difficulty of mining new Bitcoins over time, which scales in terms of computational and thus power demands and has resulted in large-scale Bitcoin farms using huge stockpiles of dedicated hardware being the main way new units are generated.

This inherent concentration makes Bitcoin susceptible to systemic risk and also implies that the majority of the gains from further adoption are likely to fall disproportionately to a small set of participants, the researchers wrote.

Bloomberg noted this could make the Bitcoin network susceptible to a 51% attackthe only way a malicious party could take it over is by seizing control of over half of the miners working on it. Such an attack would be of unprecedented scale and seems quite unlikely, at least outside of some nation-state or James Bond villain scenario.

The full study is available for reading over at NBER here.

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Roughly One-Third of Bitcoin Is Controlled by a Small Cabal of Whales, According to New Study - Gizmodo

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Heres the Line in the Sand for a Bitcoin Breakout, According to Veteran Crypto Trader Tone Vays – The Daily Hodl

Veteran crypto trader Tone Vays says one key price level will act as the breakout line for Bitcoins next price spike.

In a new strategy session, Vays says he originally expected Bitcoin (BTC) to pull back even further to about $54,000, but that may not end up happening.

The trader tells his 115,000 YouTube subscribers he likes the fact that Bitcoins 128-day moving average is close to crossing above its 200-day moving average, which could suggest more bullish price action in the medium to long term.

Vays says that one more green daily close would put BTC very near $64,000, which is what he calls the breakout line for the king crypto. He thinks the resistance around $66,000 is not strong enough to hold off another rise.

That would get us very close to this line, and Im using this line as the breakout line If we can get above this line, I see very little probability that this top will hold, and once we get above this $64,000 line on a sustained basis or an end-of-close or a 24-hour average basis, Im going to anticipate this top to fall in short order and up and up and up and up we go. So the daily chart, while neutral, is certainly leaning bullish.

Back in September, Vays accurately predicted that Bitcoin would take out its all-time highs in mid-October. The next part of his prediction sees BTC then grinding its way up to the six-figure mark in late December.

Just like before, in early October or mid-October, I expect us to start challenging the prior all-time highs and then a huge run-up at the end of the year.

Like mid-October into late December, Im expecting us to go from that $65,000 all the way to $100,000. That is still my target.

I

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As bitcoin soars in value again, here’s what to think about before you buy – CNBC

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It's been a good week for bitcoin, and it just got even better.

With the first bitcoin futures exchange-traded fund debuting on the New York Stock Exchange on Tuesday, the cryptocurrency was trading at more than $66,000 on Wednesday.

That's a record: the highest the digital coin has ever gone before was in April, at $64,899.

As a result, temptations to buy bitcoin may be growing, too.

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Before you do, though, here are some useful things to consider, according to experts.

Stories of bitcoin millionaires. The fact that the digital coin's value went from essentially nothing to top $64,000 in under a decade.

Hearing this, of course that makes many people have a fear of missing out, or "FOMO."

Investors often fall prey to the social bias of "herding," said Kent Baker, a finance professor at American University. In other words: They do what the crowd does, believing that everyone else must know more than they do and that there's safety in numbers.

"Generally, such investors are wrong on both counts," Baker said.

In reality, the other people in the crowd are putting the same blind faith in everyone else, with just as little to back it up.

Trying to understand a digital asset's fundamental valuation is "very tricky," said Bruce Mizrach, an economics professor at Rutgers University's School of Arts and Sciences.

With most stocks, he said, you can at least get a price-earnings ratio, which tells you what investors are willing to pay for a company for every dollar of its earnings. That figure can help you determine if a company is over- or undervalued.

You're more in the dark with bitcoin.

By the time most individual investors get into a rising investment, it's often too late.

Kent Baker

finance professor at American University

"The rise in the cryptocurrencies is reminiscent of the early stages of the internet bubble, with investors trying to evaluate stocks without earnings," Mizrach said.

Most investors can explain what a bubble is: It's what happens when a good's price far exceeds its real value. And many of those considering buying bitcoin probably suspect that it's largely speculation and hype that's driven the price so high.

But people buy assets even when they know they're overvalued, "because they expect prices to go even higher," Mizrach said.

And, he said, "they all believe that they can exit before the bubble crashes."

Just remember: that's what everyone else is thinking.

"By the time most individual investors get into a rising investment, it's often too late," Baker said.

All that being said, investors would be mistaken to ignore the rise of cryptocurrencies, said Douglas Boneparth, certified financial planner and president of Bone Fide Wealth in New York.

"It's definitely a bad idea to stick your head in the sand and assume this is nothing," Boneparth said. "The reality here is you're watching an entire decentralized financial system being built before your eyes."

He recommends people educate themselves as much as possible on the technology, and then they can determine if they should be invested in digital currencies and if so, how much.

For many, the standard advice from financial experts is not to put more than 1% to 5% of your money into the assets will hold true. Meanwhile, others may find their conviction in the innovation and tolerance for risk allows for more.

Have you recently bought bitcoin for the first time? If you'd be willing to share your experience getting into cryptocurrencies for an upcoming story, please email me at annie.nova@nbcuni.com

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As bitcoin soars in value again, here's what to think about before you buy - CNBC

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Bitcoin is over $66,000. Here are 3 questions to ask yourself before you invest – CNBC

Bitcoin, the largest cryptocurrency by market value, hit an all-time high on Wednesday, surging above $66,000. Its previous record of $64,899 was set in mid-April.

This surge comes after the first U.S. bitcoin futures exchange-traded fund made its market debut on Tuesday.

With all the hype, investors may feel tempted to buy in on the fear of missing out, or "FOMO."

"A lot of people who have yet to get into the space or really learn more about it are going to be bombarded with a lot of noise right now," Douglas Boneparth, certified financial planner and president of Bone Fide Wealth, tellsCNBC Make It.

But before investing in bitcoin or any other cryptocurrency, it's important to step back from the noise and excitement and first understand what it means to invest in a digital asset, he says.

To do that, Boneparth recommends asking yourself three questions.

First, assess why you want to invest in the first place.

If you're just afraid of missing out, then you should probably pause before moving forward. It's important to truly understand bitcoin, cryptocurrency or any asset prior to investing in it.

"'Educate before allocate' is a phrase that me and my friends are using," says Boneparth, who has invested in bitcoin since 2014.

Taking a step back may be difficult, especially now as bitcoin hits an all-time high, but it's worth taking some time to research what it is, how it operates and what the risks are before parting with your money.

Next, consider how well you handle extreme swings in price, since bitcoin is a notoriously volatile asset. "That's not easy to handle for most investors," Boneparth says.

For some people, the volatility "may be OK, that may coincide with your appetite for risk and your own risk tolerance and investment time horizon," Boneparth says. "But, you still got to live with it."

Other investors may prefer something more stable.

But regardless of your tolerance level, financial experts warn that the volatility makes bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies a riskier investment than something like a low-cost index fund, which should be kept in mind.

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Some Are Betting on State-of-the-Art Mining Machines as Bitcoin (BTC) Breaks New Price Ground – Yahoo Finance

Photo by Rebcenter on Pixabay

The following post was written and/or published as a collaboration between Benzingas in-house sponsored content team and a financial partner of Benzinga.

You dont have to be an aficionado of the financial markets to know that cryptocurrency is booming.

As Bitcoin breaks the $60,000 mark, millions of crypto miners are reaping the rewards of their labor, and millions of others are joining the chase.

One such entrant is OLB Group (NASDAQ: OLB). Joining the likes of Marathon Digital Holdings (NASDAQ: MARA), Bit Digital (NASDAQ: BTBT), Hut 8 Mining Corp. (NASDAQ: HUT), Riot Blockchain (NASDAQ: RIOT) and Canaan Inc. (NASDAQ: CAN), OLB Group is developing a state-of-the-art, mining-machine line to capitalize on the crypto surge.

But the clock is ticking. According to Blockchain.com, 18.84 million Bitcoins have already been mined, and crypto miners are already diversifying into smaller coins like Cardano (ADA), Monero (XMR), Ravencoin (RVN) and Doge (DOGE).

For crypto miners, the added competition and the diminishing supply only intensify the need to create as efficient a mining system as possible.

And here is where OLB Group has an edge.

What Makes a Good Mining Machine?

The efficiency of mining machines can be summarized through 3 important characteristics: hash rate, power consumption and durability.

A higher hash rate means your computer can take more guesses per second than its competitors, making it more likely that it will find the mathematical solution needed to successfully mine a cryptocurrency.

The ideal mining machine has a high hash rate, a low power consumption (this helps reduce the electricity bill) and good durability.

Gaining a Competitive Advantage

The DragonMint T1 is as ideal as it gets in this market. With a rumored development cost of $30 million, the mining machine has a speed of 16 terahashes per second (TH/s) and a power consumption of 1,480 watts (W).

According to BitDegree, the 2 closest competitors, AntMiner T9 and M3X, can only muster 10.5TH/s and 13TH/s. And its worth noting that the M3Xs power consumption is 600W higher than the DragonMint1.

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OLB Group is looking to use such state-of-the-art hardware in its newest crypto mining project. Equipped with the right technology, OLB Group will be able to capture cryptocurrency faster and cheaper than competitors.

Moreover, a brand-new, well-ventilated and properly managed farm of cryptocurrency miners can help reduce costs that older participants are less capable of diverting. The cruxes of older systems, such as viruses, overheating and equipment malfunction, bear much less an influence on these newer and more advanced technologies.

Is There Still Time?

The trajectory of cryptocurrency has been spectacular. Since 2017, Bitcoin has grown 6,500% and has been the best-performing asset class for 2 years straight. Currently sitting at all-time highs, many believe that the cryptocurrency run is far from over.

No one can know with certainty where the currency will go, but what you can know are the players suited to take advantage of the ride.

OLB Group is one of those players, and it looks like its just getting started.

The preceding post was written and/or published as a collaboration between Benzingas in-house sponsored content team and a financial partner of Benzinga. Although the piece is not and should not be construed as editorial content, the sponsored content team works to ensure that any and all information contained within is true and accurate to the best of their knowledge and research. This content is for informational purposes only and not intended to be investing advice.

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2021 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.

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Some Are Betting on State-of-the-Art Mining Machines as Bitcoin (BTC) Breaks New Price Ground - Yahoo Finance

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OLB Group Expands Bitcoin Mining Operation With 500 ASIC Miners, Expects $1M Monthly Revenue – Yahoo Finance

OLB Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: OLB), a cloud-based merchant service provider, is expanding its Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) mining enterprise DMint.

What Happened: DMint will add 500 Antminer S19j Pro cryptocurrency mining computers by the end of the year and add five additional Bitcoin data centers, the company said Tuesday.

The company aims to capitalize on the recent geographical shift in mining operations, with the U.S. now replacing China as the worlds top destination for Bitcoin mining. Moreover, Bitcoins price has appreciated by more than 80% since DMint first launched its cost-efficient Bitcoin mining business.

The positive price movement since the start of our mining operations makes us even more optimistic about the long-term viability of our operations. We remain fully committed to scaling our operations to 24,000 computers by the end of 2023, Ronny Yakov, chairman and CEO of the OLB Group, said in a statement.

Once the operation has reached full capacity, the company expects DMint will mine 15.5 BTC per month.

Assuming the mining network size remains the same and current market prices continue to prevail, this would equate to up to $1 million in monthly revenue.

"Because we are a diversified company with a robust core eCommerce business, we have a stable revenue base as our foundation as we ramp up our Bitcoin mining operations," said Yakov.

DMint plans to increase mining capacity to 24,000 mining computers to build out capacity to achieve 2.4 exahash per second over the next 24 months.

OLB Price Action: OLB shares gained 3.61% on Monday, closing at a price of $4.44 per share.

Photo by Dmitry Demidko on Unsplash.

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Swarm of Alternative Crypto Assets Outpace Bitcoin’s Gains by Double Digits This Week Markets and Prices Bitcoin News – Bitcoin News

After the price of bitcoin tapped an all-time high above the $67K handle, it then dropped below the $60K zone to $59,510 per unit. Since then, the leading crypto asset has regained some of the losses and bitcoin is still up 2.4% during the last seven days. However, a great number of crypto assets have outperformed bitcoins weekly rise, capturing double-digit gains as high as 65.1%.

Digital currency markets are on the move again as the $2.733 trillion market valuation of all 10,000+ crypto assets is up 4.6% on Monday. BTC has jumped a bit higher during the latter half of Sundays trading sessions into Monday and BTC has gained 2.4% this past week. But theres over 55 different digital assets that have outperformed BTCs weekly gains.

The top seven-day gainer this week is thorchain (RUNE) which has jumped a whopping 65.1% this past week. The crypto asset thorchain has a $3.3 billion market capitalization and $208 million in trade volume on Monday. Nexo (NEXO) spiked 61.6% during the last week and has a market cap of around $1.5 billion.

Nexo is followed by okbs (OKB) gains which have jumped 61.5% this week and nears (NEAR) value rise of 56.1%. Shiba inu suffered some losses after Elon Musk said he didnt own any SHIB but the meme-currency did gather 53.2% in gains this week. Harmony (ONE) did well this past week obtaining 47.5% and safemoon (SAFEMOON) lifted 45.8%.

As far as the top ten crypto are concerned, ethereum (ETH) has risen 9.4%, binance coin (BNB) spiked 3.4%, solana (SOL) is up 33%, polkadot (DOT) up 5.7%, and dogecoin (DOGE) jumped 10.7%. With a $2.733 trillion market valuation, all the digital assets today have seen around $125 billion in global trade volume.

Ethereums 9.4% gain has cushioned ethers dominance level this week as it has tapped 18.2% on Monday. Bitcoins dominance level has dropped a couple of percentages from over 45% to 43.5% on Monday afternoon.

Furthermore, binance coin (BNB) has a market cap dominance of around 3.09%, the stablecoin tether (USDT) commands 2.72%, cardano (ADA) 2.71%, and solana (SOL) 2.43% in terms of market dominance among the 10,000+ crypto assets.

What do you think about the crypto market performers this past week? Let us know what you think about this subject in the comments section below.

Image Credits: Shutterstock, Pixabay, Wiki Commons

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. It is not a direct offer or solicitation of an offer to buy or sell, or a recommendation or endorsement of any products, services, or companies. Bitcoin.com does not provide investment, tax, legal, or accounting advice. Neither the company nor the author is responsible, directly or indirectly, for any damage or loss caused or alleged to be caused by or in connection with the use of or reliance on any content, goods or services mentioned in this article.

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Elon Musk on his crypto portfolio: I only own bitcoin, ether and dogecoin – CNBC

Billionaire Elon Musk, CEO of SpaceX and Tesla, often tweets about different cryptocurrencies, and in doing so, has seemingly impacted their prices.

A few times throughout 2021, the price of an altcoin called shiba inu appeared to jump after Musk repeatedly posted images of his shiba inu puppy on Twitter.

But on Sunday, Musk clarified that he doesn't own any shiba inu coins and that he only owns bitcoin, ether and dogecoin. "That's it," he said.

"As I've said before, don't bet the farm on crypto!" Musk tweeted. "True value is building products & providing services to your fellow human beings, not money in any form."

Musk also confirmed that he owns bitcoin, ether and dogecoin in July during"The B-Word" conference.

On Sunday, he explained why he supports dogecoin, a meme-inspired cryptocurrency that began as a joke in 2013, in particular.

For Musk, it all started after hearing from his employees, he said.

"Lots of people I talked to on the production lines at Tesla or building rockets at SpaceX own Doge," Musk said. "They aren't financial experts or Silicon Valley technologists. That's why I decided to support Doge it felt like the people's crypto."

His support for dogecoin isn't new. In fact, Musk started to tweet about dogecoin back in 2019.

Though Musk said he hasn't recently been in contact with dogecoin developers, he has repeatedly mentioned working with them throughout the year.

Musk has even joked about dogecoin potentially becoming the future reserve currency.

"The point is that dogecoin was invented as a joke, essentially to make fun of cryptocurrency," hetold TMZ in May. "Fate loves irony. What would be the most ironic outcome? The currency that started as a joke in fact becomes the real currency. To the moon!"

But remember, just because Musk or another influencer or executive tweets about a cryptocurrency does not mean it is valuable or a good investment. Feeding into social media hype will often result in money lost, experts warn.

That's in part why investors should always do their own research before deciding where to put their money. As theSEC warned in 2017, "it is never a good ideato make an investment decision just because someone famous saysa product or serviceis a good investment."

Experts view cryptocurrency as a volatile, risky and speculative investment. They warn to only invest what you can afford to lose.

As of 11:33 a.m. EST, bitcoin is trading at around $63,319, ether at around $4,151 and dogecoin at around 27 cents, according to Coin Metrics.

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Why is Illinois’ largest electric utility mining Bitcoin near one of its coal-fired power plants? – Bloomington Pantagraph

WEST ALTON, Illinois In farmland near the banks of the Mississippi River, the state's largest electric utility has stuffed a shipping container full of high-powered computers, in the shadow of one of its coal-fired power plants.

The project, launched quietly this year at Ameren Corp.'s Sioux Energy Center here, is a controversial experiment: Ameren built the data center to guzzle energy from the electric grid and help its power plants avoid ramping their production down and back up again, which wastes energy and stresses the plants.

But the company needed something for the computers to work on. So Ameren devised a task for the servers: "Mine" for Bitcoin, the polarizing digital currency now on a Wall Street tear.

The work is novel. Experts are unaware of other regulated U.S. utilities mining cryptocurrencies. Ameren said the company believes it is "one of, if not the first in the country" to perform the activity.

If successful, the experiment could cut power plants' carbon emissions and make Ameren millions, both from more efficient operations and from the bitcoins themselves. The company has already collected more than 20 bitcoins, valued, as of Friday, at more than $60,000 apiece.

But critics are disconcerted. They worry the data center is a ploy to artificially heighten demand for struggling coal plants, allowing them to run more than is justified. They argue that the venture will burn more coal and pollute more, not less, all while missing opportunities to use that same energy to power other technologies, such as battery storage or electric vehicle charging stations.

Meanwhile, state watchdogs who police utility spending and consumer impacts want to ensure that ratepayers remain off the hook for costs tied to "speculative commodities, like virtual currencies."

"Should a public utility be dabbling in cryptocurrency?" asked local Sierra Club official Andy Knott. "This seems like a bizarre activity for a monopoly public utility."

Bitcoins which only exist digitally, and have no physical backing, like an actual coin or bill make up the original and most valuable set of cryptocurrencies that are acquired and exchanged using an electronic ledger on a shared network, known as a blockchain, that tracks each transaction and addition of new "coins."

Since Bitcoin's perceived value relies largely on scarcity, mining individual bitcoins is difficult by design. It requires that high-powered computers grind out giant numbers of math problems, or hashes, in the hope of receiving newly available coins. Globally, billions of gigahashes meaning billions of billions of the problems are computed every second, according to academic experts who have testified before Congress.

All that computing devours enormous amounts of energy. And it's not just the mining for new currency: Bitcoin transactions alone can each require twice as much electricity as the average U.S. home uses in an entire month, experts say. Meanwhile, cooling the computers can create a need for even more energy, particularly in warm climates.

Bitcoin consumes more electricity than all the televisions in the U.S., according to a University of Cambridge website dedicated to Bitcoin's energy consumption, and more energy than entire countries even big ones, like Argentina.

'Fill in the valleys'

Ameren says it has not increased peak power production, and that mining Bitcoin was never its original intention. It set out to use high-powered computers as a flexible and controllable electrical load. It's not efficient, officials say, to have power plants make sudden and dramatic changes to their output. They compared it to the improved fuel efficiency that motorists see during steady highway driving, as opposed to the more demanding, stop-and-go miles in a city.

Ameren says its data center can stand in when energy demand dips.

"The objective here is to help fill in valleys," said Warren Wood, the vice president of regulatory and legislative affairs for Ameren Missouri. "That helps run the system more efficiently."

The company said it is open to other uses for the computing power. "A data center can do a lot of different things of value," Wood said. "Bitcoin just happens to be one of them."

The company has talked about using the firepower for other data-heavy tasks, it said, like DNA sequencing.

The facility's key feature is the rapid off-and-on capabilities of the computers. When use dips, they can quickly ramp up activity. When it peaks, they can ramp down at a moment's notice.

That kind of flexibility, Ameren says, can be increasingly valuable on the modern electric grid, where both power supply and demand are now prone to greater swings. Solar arrays and wind turbines produce more in sunny and windy conditions. And demand is becoming more variable, too. For example, when the sun sets, homes with rooftop solar installations can suddenly need power from the grid.

The company's data center project cost about $1 million to install, and has been running since April. Ameren said it was put at Sioux because of available space, and that it is not hooked exclusively to the coal-fired plant as a source of power.

But even though it draws energy from the overall electric grid, the region is awash in power from coal, which accounts for about two-thirds of Ameren's generation. And Missouri, overall, burns more coal than any state except Texas, according to the latest government data.

The data center can use a half of a megawatt of electricity, if running full tilt. By comparison, the 54-year-old Sioux plant the third-largest of Ameren's four coal plants has capacity to produce 972 megawatts.

'Gambles'

Knott, the interim central region director for the Sierra Club's Beyond Coal Campaign, called the data center "essentially a way to prop up coal use."

"This really increases demand on the system, and therefore, demand for coal energy," said Knott, who is based in St. Louis. "I think what they're trying to do is avoid having to ramp down their generators."

Knott said the company could better serve the public by using alternative technologies that would still help balance power demand plus offer other benefits, like electric vehicle charging stations, or battery storage projects that can accompany renewable energy generation.

"At least with batteries, you would be storing that energy and using it again later," Knott said.

The move has also been met with caution and resistance from some state regulators at the Missouri Office of Public Counsel, who argue on behalf of utility consumers.

The company initially sought to include $8,000 of the data center energy costs in a recent round of price adjustments for customers. Ameren backed off, but the OPC said that it aims to ensure that the company's exploratory look at cryptocurrencies is not backed by ratepayer money.

"Captive Missouri ratepayers should not be funding non-essential gambles on the commodities market," wrote Geoff Marke, chief economist for the OPC, in testimony filed last month.

Ameren said that its mining efforts collect one new bitcoin about every two weeks. The company is currently holding its bitcoins, rather than selling them immediately.

#bitcoin

Outside experts say the project could make immediate financial sense for the company, but also carry terrible costs in climate-warming emissions.

"I understand why they're doing it: It's extremely lucrative right now," said Joshua Rhodes, a research associate with the University of Texas at Austin's Webber Energy Group, hinting at Bitcoin's current, sky-high prices. "But if they're running more coal than they otherwise might have been, it is not a good situation for the environment."

Ameren announced last year that it intended to invest $8 billion in renewable energy projects over the next two decades and accelerate plans to reduce carbon emissions reaching "net-zero" carbon emissions by 2050.

But the more the company runs its coal-fired power plants, the less likely it is to more quickly retire them and switch to something cleaner and cheaper experts say.

Coal plants like Sioux typically only operate for a fraction of each month, as lower-cost power generation is generally deployed first. In April, for instance, Sioux only ran 17% of the time, according to the Sierra Club, and in the last seven years, the plant has never run more than 76% of the time in a single month.

Experts agree that adding load to reduce the "ramping" of power plants can potentially lower emissions, if done in smart and careful ways. But in certain scenarios, the concept also threatens to increase carbon emissions, particularly if it results in higher fossil fuel usage that wouldn't have happened otherwise.

Ameren's smaller-scale trial "is not stopping the ramping altogether, maybe just slowing it a little bit," said Rhodes, noting that he has not seen any data about the project. "Likely it's just ending up with more emissions, at this point."

Rhodes said Ameren is the only regulated utility he's aware of that is mining cryptocurrencies. It's an unusual case, he said, as a regulated electricity provider that is causing demand for its own energy.

Other examples might exist, still under wraps. Ameren's operation only came to light after state regulators arranged a call with the company to understand a filing that sought to defer costs tied to a research project capable of "producing digital assets."

But Ameren leaders said other utilities have reached out to express their own interest in the pursuit.

And interest extends beyond utilities.

University of California, Berkeley researchers have examined links between Bitcoin mining and energy prices, finding that the demand-altering activity can drive up local electricity costs.

Square, the California-based financial tech company with offices in St. Louis, has launched a Bitcoin Clean Energy Initiative. Earlier this year, it issued a multi-page memo about how Bitcoin mining's unique flexibility could make it a "complementary technology for clean energy production and storage."

The focus is just one sign that the currency has taken some key spheres of tech and popular culture by storm.

Jack Dorsey, the co-founder of Square and Twitter, and a St. Louis-area native, last year changed the bio on his personal Twitter page to a single word: "#bitcoin".

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Why is Illinois' largest electric utility mining Bitcoin near one of its coal-fired power plants? - Bloomington Pantagraph

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US Government To Auction 4.94 Bitcoin Worth Over $300,000 – Bitcoin Magazine

The U.S. government is hosting Fall for Cryptocurrency, an online bitcoin auction event, between October 26 and 28, 2021. Nearly 5 BTC will be auctioned in five different lots. In April, the U.S. government sold 9.45 BTC at a notable discount compared to market prices.

The 4.94 BTC will be auctioned in five different lots. Source: GSA Auctions.

U.S. government auctions are performed by GSA Auctions, a service of the United States General Service Administration (GSA) that functions as the federal governments online clearinghouse for surplus, federally-owned assets, and equipment.

Bitcoin auctioned by GSA is usually sold at a discounted price. In April, the government agency sold 9.45 BTC, worth $520,000 at the time, for $487,000, meaning that buyers were able to scoop bitcoin at more than 6% below market price.

The argument can be made that privacy is the actual tradeoff. The buyer is, in this case, spending less dollars at the expense of their personal information, as purchasing BTC from the government is the most invasive know-your-customer (KYC) scenario possible.

Some people may still find it attractive and worthy to hand over their personally-identifiable information (PII) for a small discount, in which case the GSA auction could be an opportunity. But caution is warranted, given the value proposition of Bitcoin may be compromised depending on the level of identifiable information a watcher possesses of a Bitcoin user.

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US Government To Auction 4.94 Bitcoin Worth Over $300,000 - Bitcoin Magazine

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