Cryptocurrency miners are at a critical juncture. I recently saw that production costs are around $88,000 per BTC, but the price hovers around $72,860. That means each coin they mine costs almost $15,000 more than its value. This can't go on.



The situation accelerated due to tensions in the Middle East. Oil prices rose above $100 , and the Strait of Hormuz is virtually closed, which spikes electricity costs for operations. Recently, difficulty dropped 7.76%, the second-largest negative adjustment of the year. The network is showing stress: block times have stretched to 12 minutes when they should be 10. The hash rate has fallen significantly from its highs.

Meanwhile, publicly traded crypto miners are shifting toward AI and high-performance computing because margins are more predictable there. When costs aren't covered, they have to sell Bitcoin to keep operations running, adding more pressure to a market that already has 43% of its supply in losses. If BTC stays where it is and difficulty continues to fall, this will be a tough period for the entire mining industry.
BTC1,34%
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