Bitcoin's computing power has pulled back roughly 15% from the October high, with miners continuing to face pressure—we're now in the 60th day of capitulation. What's more telling is the mining difficulty adjustment scheduled for January 22nd, which is expected to drop about 4% to around 139T. This marks the seventh consecutive negative adjustment over the past eight cycles, signaling sustained weakness in the mining ecosystem.
From a market perspective, this creates real consequences. Marginal miners—those operating on thin margins—are increasingly forced into a corner. Some will have to power down operations entirely, while others might resort to liquidating Bitcoin holdings to cover operational costs. It's a classic squeeze that separates the efficient miners from the rest.
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GasGrillMaster
· 6h ago
60-day bottoming period, weak coin miners should do some reshuffling, right?
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YieldFarmRefugee
· 6h ago
Another round of bank runs, and individual miners should panic.
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SpeakWithHatOn
· 6h ago
Hash rate drops by 15%, difficulty decreases seven times in a row, this round of miners are really pushed into a dead end.
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TokenDustCollector
· 7h ago
The 60-day surrender period is almost over... It really serves those marginal miners right to give up. If there's no efficiency, you should be eliminated.
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MetaverseVagabond
· 7h ago
Hash rate drops by 15%, another round of squeeze is coming, small miners should be crying.
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LayoffMiner
· 7h ago
It's been 60 days... We small miners really can't hold on anymore.
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DustCollector
· 7h ago
Mining difficulty has been lowered seven consecutive times, this time it's really going to be intense.
Bitcoin's computing power has pulled back roughly 15% from the October high, with miners continuing to face pressure—we're now in the 60th day of capitulation. What's more telling is the mining difficulty adjustment scheduled for January 22nd, which is expected to drop about 4% to around 139T. This marks the seventh consecutive negative adjustment over the past eight cycles, signaling sustained weakness in the mining ecosystem.
From a market perspective, this creates real consequences. Marginal miners—those operating on thin margins—are increasingly forced into a corner. Some will have to power down operations entirely, while others might resort to liquidating Bitcoin holdings to cover operational costs. It's a classic squeeze that separates the efficient miners from the rest.