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Reevaluating Bitcoin's "Invisible Value Anchor" through Cost
Many traditional assets have valuation models, but Bitcoin is often considered to lack an anchor. In reality, mining costs have long served as an invisible reference for value. When difficulty decreases, it indicates that some high-cost hash power is exiting the market, prompting a reassessment of production costs.
Simply put, the marginal production cost of Bitcoin is changing. If the price remains below most miners' costs for an extended period, hash power will gradually clear out until supply and demand reach a new equilibrium. This mechanism is similar to commodity markets.
Of course, Bitcoin's price won't strictly follow costs, but cost ranges often form psychological support levels. Miners are natural long positions; they prefer to hold coins rather than sell at a loss.
During difficulty declines, it also often encourages miners to upgrade equipment and seek low-cost energy, driving technological progress in the industry. In the long run, this actually enhances network security and efficiency.
Therefore, mining difficulty is not just a technical parameter but also an economic signal. It reflects the real survival status of all network participants.
Bitcoin's value is not only in narratives and consensus but also in the real costs built by hash power and energy investment. #比特币挖矿难度下降