Just been looking at mining economics and the picture is getting pretty grim for BTC producers right now. According to the latest difficulty data, miners are sitting on average production costs around 88k per coin while BTC is trading near 73k. That's a 15k loss per block and honestly explains why so many operations are getting squeezed hard.



The geopolitical situation isn't helping either. Oil prices staying elevated, tensions in the Middle East affecting energy costs, and all that uncertainty is pushing hashrate down. Network difficulty dropped 7.76% recently to 133.79 trillion, which is the second-biggest negative adjustment this year. Block times are stretching to 12+ minutes when they should be 10. You can see the stress on the network.

What's interesting is how this is forcing miners to adapt. The big public operations are pivoting hard into AI and data centers for more stable revenue streams instead of just holding bags on unprofitable mining. That's gotta add selling pressure to the market when they're moving BTC to fund operations. Hashprice is hovering around 33.30 per petahash per day according to Luxor data, which is barely breakeven territory.

So why bitcoin miners are down comes down to simple math: costs exceed revenue and there's no quick fix. The network will eventually self-correct through lower difficulty, but that period between when margins turn negative and when difficulty adjusts enough to restore profitability is where real damage happens. Next adjustment expected early April could go even lower if price stays where it is. Worth watching how this plays out for spot market structure.
BTC0,64%
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