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I just reviewed the numbers, and the situation for Bitcoin miners is quite complicated right now. It turns out they are operating at a loss of around 21% for each block they mine, with production costs around $88,000 while the price is near $72,700. That means a gap of almost $15,000 per coin that simply doesn't close.
What's interesting is that this isn't just bad market luck. Bitcoin mining has been hit by the combination of oil prices above $100 and the situation in the Middle East, which is directly pushing up electricity costs. The Strait of Hormuz, which moves about 20% of the world's oil and gas flow, is effectively closed to most commercial traffic. This especially impacts miners operating in markets sensitive to the energy supply from that region.
The network is already showing stress. Difficulty recently dropped nearly 8%, the second-largest negative adjustment of the year, and the hash rate has significantly retreated from 2025 highs. Block times have extended to over 12 minutes when they should be around 10. The hashprice metric, which measures expected revenue per computational power, is near break-even for most hardware.
When miners can't cover costs, they sell Bitcoin to fund operations. That adds supply pressure in a market that already has 43% of its supply in losses. Bitcoin mining companies listed on stock exchanges have started diversifying into AI and high-performance computing, which offer more predictable income. The next difficulty adjustment is projected for early April and is expected to continue decreasing based on available data. If the price stays below $88,000, the exodus of miners will continue, and difficulty will keep falling. The network self-corrects by design, but the period between when costs exceed revenues and when difficulty drops enough to restore profitability is where real damage occurs—both for miners and for the market that absorbs their forced sales.