‘Survival Mode’ Activated: Bitcoin Miners Struggle As Hashprice Collapses

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Bitcoin’s mining industry is feeling growing strain as the key profitability gauge, hash price, slides toward levels that could push smaller operators offline and put pressure on mining equipment providers and service partners.

Hash Price Nears Danger Level

According to industry reports, hash price — the expected daily revenue per unit of computing power — is about $42 per PH/s today, down from above $62 per PH/s in July.

That dip toward the $40 mark is forcing some smaller and less efficient miners to weigh powering down their rigs. Reports have disclosed that when revenue falls this far, operators with thin margins can no longer cover power and maintenance bills.

Hardware makers and hosting firms are being affected. Orders for machines have slowed, and any income tied to Bitcoin has lost value after the market slide in October.

Some manufacturers have started mining with their own machines to offset weaker customer demand. Bitdeer and similar firms have been reported to expand self-mining operations to fill gaps in sales.

Hash price drops and approaches a critical level. Source: TheMinerMag

Miners Move Into AI Compute

High capital costs and steady increases in hashrate make running ASIC farms tougher, especially after the April 2024 halving cut the block reward to 3.125 BTC.

Back in 2009, the block reward was 50 BTC and people could mine with CPUs. Today, only specialized hardware makes mining viable for most operators. That shift has pushed some companies to convert capacity into general compute for AI workloads.

Based on reports, big deals show the trend is real. Cipher Mining signed a $5.5 billion, 15-year deal to supply compute power to Amazon Web Services in October.

IREN later agreed to provide GPU services to Microsoft in a contract valued at $9.7 billion. These moves are meant to bring steady revenue when Bitcoin mining profits shrink.

BTCUSD now trading at $102,248. Chart: TradingView

Market Slump Adds To Miner Stress

Bitcoin’s price weakness has compounded the problem. The token briefly fell below $100,000, trading as much as 20% below the October 6 high of above $126,000.

Analysts point to heavy selling by long-term holders: since late June, net sales from that group have topped 1 million bitcoin, according to Compass Point analyst Ed Engel.

A large liquidation of leveraged positions on Oct. 10 also shook the market and knocked out support levels near $117,000 and $112,000.

Image: Dragos Condrea / Getty Images

Markus Thielen, founder and CEO of 10X Research, said the market’s failure to reclaim key levels suggests bearish conditions, and his firm maintains that bitcoin could still fall further before a bottom appears.

His team had earlier forecast a drop to $100,000 and now says a buyable bottom may be “a few weeks away.”

Featured image from Pexels, chart from TradingView

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