“Don’t just ride the wave – own the surfboard.”
– Business maxim
Since its launch in 2009, Bitcoin has outperformed virtually every other asset class.
It has evolved from a fringe experiment to become a globally recognized financial instrument, earning its place in the portfolios of hedge funds, sovereign wealth funds, and now, even pension plans.
From Aug 2011 – Feb 2025, Bitcoin generated an average annual return of 98.6%.
But as you know, it has not always been an easy ride.
Bitcoin is highly volatile, with drawdowns of 20% in a few days not uncommon, and in bear market conditions, drawdowns can peak at 80%.
While buying and holding Bitcoin has rewarded early adopters, there’s another, often overlooked, path to tapping into its explosive potential upside – owning part of the infrastructure that powers Bitcoin itself – Bitcoin mining.
Historically, Bitcoin mining has been reserved for deep-tech experts; folks who are comfortable managing firmware, network security, and optimizing machines operating at the edge of physics.
But now that has changed.
Today I’ll be reviewing Abundant Mines: An innovative company that makes Bitcoin mining simple. They abstract away the technical requirements, and let you own your own hardware — complete with cash flow & tax benefits.
There has been lots of interest from the community on this company.
Let’s dive in 👇
Note: This issue is sponsored by our friend Beau Turner at Abundant Mines, with research & due diligence performed by crypto expert Tim Lea. As always, we think you’ll find it informative and fair.
Tim Lea is OG in the blockchain and cypto space, and a 20-year veteran of corporate finance and funding with GE Capital, HSBC, and Lloyds Bank. His previous issue for Alts was on crypto indexing. An author of two books and a keynote speaker at 130+ events, he’s also an award-winning independent film director.
Table of Contents
Bitcoin’s economics
Before we get into mining, it’s important to have a basic understanding of the drivers behind Bitcoin’s growth, volatility, and supply economics.
At a high-level, gold and Bitcoin have very similar characteristics
- Both have limited supply
- There is a complex and expensive process for mining
Bitcoin’s supply dynamic
As of today, there are 19.8 million Bitcoins currently in existence, and there will be a maximum of 21 million Bitcoins mined, which is programmatically fixed by code
- Satoshi Nakamoto, Bitcoin’s anonymous creator, is believed to hold 1 million BTC, which remains untouched. With a value of nearly $100 billion, this is the largest Bitcoin holding held by anyone. It’s a massive stash that hackers have never successfully cracked, proving the security of the Bitcoin network.
- Every four years, the number of Bitcoins mined automatically halves. The last halving happened in mid-2024, where mining rewards were reduced from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC per block. The mining curve shows the number of Bitcoins mined since 2009 – but the story doesn’t end there.
- Around 3 million Bitcoins have been accidentally lost or destroyed. There are stories galore of people losing their early Bitcoins. (You may be familiar with the man suing his local authority to dig up a landfill site where he says $800m worth of Bitcoin are sitting an old computer he threw out in 2013.)
Bitcoin’s demand dynamic
Does it still have room to grow?
No one has a crystal ball, but there is substantial momentum behind it:
Institutional adoption is accelerating
In January 2024, after years of regulatory hurdles, 11 Spot Bitcoin ETFs were approved and launched on Wall Street. These have opened the floodgates for institutional capital, retirement accounts, and family offices.
The latest Coinglass data shows there are no less than 19 active Bitcoin ETFs, with over $110 billion in AUM.
Sovereign/political interest is accelerating
On March 6, 2025, the Trump Administration signed an executive order to formally establish a strategic bitcoin reserve for the US, and is establishing budget-neutral strategies for acquiring additional Bitcoin.
Sixteen US states have also introduced Bitcoin reserve legislation, and multiple countries are also rumored to have already quietly started to acquire Bitcoin, with many looking to establish formal strategic Bitcoin Reserves.
The technological ecosystem has matured
Institutional-grade custody services, regulatory clarity, and enhanced security frameworks continue to mitigate the risks of investing in Bitcoin.
To put it simply: the Bitcoin network has increasing demand and is facing an upcoming supply crunch, with only 5% of the remaining Bitcoin being mined over the next 115 years.
What is Abundant Mines?
Abundant Mines is an Oregon-based Bitcoin mining-as-a-service company. They give investors passive exposure to bitcoin mining, while eliminating the need for the deep technical skills required to do so.
Abundant Mines gives customers direct ownership of mining hardware housed and maintained in Abundant Mines’ own energy-optimized data centers in the Pacific Northwest.
How it works:
- You purchase high-quality, industry-standard ASIC mining machines
- Price varies between $7,000 – $10,000 per unit. It all depends on processing power — the more powerful the machine, the more Bitcoin it can mine.
- You can opt to pay hosting costs monthly or pre-pay your annual electricity upfront (primarily to pull forward tax expenses.)
- Your Bitcoin mining machines are hosted in a secure, professionally managed facility
- The mined Bitcoin is paid directly to your Bitcoin wallet.
You leave all the firmware updates, operational challenges, and sources of consistent power to Abundant, which offers a guaranteed 95% uptime. (In discussions with CEO Beau Turner, actual uptimes are typically around 98%.)
Let’s examine the current structure for generating $10,000 per month in net passive income.
ROI breakdown
The ROI breakdown below demonstrates the current estimated structure produced by Abundant Mines, which targets $10,000 per month of net passive income.
Please note that certain elements of this structure affects the results. For example, the computing power of the units purchased, the choice to prepay electricity and hosting, and the volatile price of Bitcoin – and its associated “mining difficulty.” More on this below.
(To get additional color around the ideal structure, review Abundant Mines’ December 2024 video, which shows a different configuration to generate ~$10,000 per month.)
This model becomes particularly powerful, however, when considered in tandem with the direct ownership of the hardware.
Tax deductions
By setting up as an operational business, mining setups may qualify for significant first-year tax deductions.
Under US law, extended depreciation may be available, estimated to be 40% as of 2024. (Please note: Definitely check with your own tax advisor to ensure these provisions apply to your jurisdiction/personal situation)
The hardware is an asset too
In discussions with Beau, the hardware itself is also in high demand due to its high-level computing power, which means the value of the hardware tends to retain 75% of the initial purchase price at the end of Year 1, thereby generating additional asset value.
(There have even been situations where the units have sold for more than their initial purchase price, especially during Bitcoin price runs!)
Flexibility
If you’re new to mining, or can’t afford a half a million dollar investment, you can start with as little as 1 unit and scale over time — ideal for learning how mining works without a significant upfront commitment.
Bitcoin’s achilles heel
What happens when BTC crashes?
Now, to be clear, Bitcoin’s price swings can definitely impact mining profitability.
Over the last 12 months, BTC has ranged from $49,000 (Aug 2024) to an all-time high of $109,500 (Jan 2025).
At a high-level, if the Bitcoin price goes up, the profitability of mining rises, and if the price falls, the reverse is true.
Bitcoin’s self-stabilizing mining system
However, the Bitcoin network maintains balance, even as market conditions fluctuate.
It does this through a self-correcting mechanism that ensures new Bitcoins are created every 10 minutes, no matter how many parties are mining, and it’s all based on game theory.
Here’s how this works, in plain English:
- Bitcoin mining is fundamentally about miners’ computer hardware solving cryptographic puzzles
- When the price of Bitcoin increases, mining becomes more profitable, attracting more miners to mine.
- As more miners join, the total computing power (called the hashrate) increases, which means blocks are getting mined faster than the intended 10 minutes.
- To bring things back into balance, the Bitcoin network automatically raises its mining difficulty by making the puzzles that miners solve increasingly harder to solve, requiring an increase in hashrate so that the block time returns to ~10 minutes.
The reverse happens when Bitcoin’s price falls or electricity costs rise — some miners temporarily power down, reducing the hashrate.
This automatic adjustment occurs every two weeks, and it is what keeps Bitcoin mining stable and predictable, even within a volatile landscape.
In short, it’s a built-in balancing act — a self-tuning system that ensures Bitcoin continues to function smoothly, regardless of the number of players participating in the game.
As Beau Turner is keen to point out: with smart management, it also creates an opportunity:
“There’s a period in the market where spirits run high, price is ripping, economics look amazing – and you just can’t deploy capacity fast enough in the physical world to catch up. If you’re already ahead of the game and deployed, you’re doing very well.”
And when the price falls…
“Even when you’re mining at break-even, you’re still accumulating Bitcoin at cost (while still incurring your depreciation and operating expense benefits). For many of our high net worth and high- earning clients, that’s the goal. They’re not chasing short-term profit, they’re playing the long game.”
Of course, you also have the option to switch off your hardware at any time, should you wish.
Mining Bitcoin vs holding
One of the most compelling arguments in favor of Bitcoin mining is that it can outperform simply holding Bitcoin.
The chart from Abundant Mines (and produced by external data analytics company, Blockware) compares three return profiles from 2020 to early 2024:
- 🟠 Spot BTC returns (orange line): Reflects the performance of simply buying and holding Bitcoin.
- ⚪ Mining returns (white line): Returns from operating ASIC machines over time, excluding hardware resale value.
- 🔵 Mining returns with ASIC resale (blue line): Total return including the resale value of mining hardware when cycles peak.
Over the period analyzed:
- Spot BTC delivered an impressive +627% return.
- Mining operations alone outperformed with +971%.
- When factoring in ASIC resale (common when demand for hardware spikes), returns were +1,016%.
In other words, during this period of 6x returns for underlying BTC, mining was a 10x return.
The data reinforces a key point: while mining carries operational risks and monthly costs, it also has multidimensional upside.
In bull markets, not only do miners earn BTC at increasingly valuable rates, but the hardware itself appreciates, creating a secondary layer of value.
Closing thoughts: Who is Abundant Mines best for?
Abundant Mines offers an extremely interesting value proposition — passive Bitcoin exposure through infrastructure ownership rather than token speculation.
For long-term Bitcoin believers, tax-savvy investors, and those seeking real-world yield from digital assets, it’s a play worth considering.
With turnkey service, green energy sourcing, and real hardware ownership, it opens up a high-potential alternative to simply holding BTC.
However, like all things crypto, it comes with volatility, so ensure it aligns with your time horizon, tax situation, and, especially, your risk appetite.
And on that note, one thing I really appreciate in chatting with Beau is that he gives it to you straight. Per Beau:
“One of my least favorite questions to answer is about ROI, since it has so many variables and is heavily impacted by time horizon. Anybody who only does it for 2 years and misses the 1 year where it booms is going to be mad at me. I would rather people have realistic expectations and not feel like they were sold a bag of goods.
Making predictions is a dangerous game, and I try to stay away from predictions while still giving clear bowling lanes of what can happen.”
Hopefully in this issue, we’ve done exactly that.
Or if you have questions for Beau, feel free to ping him in the Alts Community:
That’s it for today
See you next time,
Tim
Disclosures from Alts
- This issue was written by Tim Lea and edited by Stefan von Imhof
- Abundant Mines was able to review an early draft of this article. Tim and Stefan made final editorial decisions.
- Neither the authors nor Alts have purchased any mining rigs yet. But I (Stefan) am absolutely considering it.
This issue is a sponsored deep dive, meaning Alts has been paid to write an independent analysis of Abundant Mines. Abundant Mines has agreed to offer a deep look at its business, offerings, and operations. Abundant Mines is also a sponsor of Alts, but our research is neutral and unbiased. This should not be considered financial, legal, tax, or investment advice, but rather an independent analysis to help readers make their own investment decisions. All opinions expressed here are ours, and ours alone. We hope you find it informative and fair.