AMBCrypto Weekly

DECIPHERIN­G WHAT LED BITCOIN MINERS TO SELL PART OF THEIR BTC HOLDINGS

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The cryptocurr­ency world is rapidly evolving. With regards to the proof of work consensus mechanism, people are being more concerned about Bitcoin mining operations. Furthermor­e, miners are progressiv­ely facing difficulti­es in the process.

In this context, it’s important to note that the amount of Bitcoin held by crypto miners has recently hit its 10-year low. Consider the graph below highlighte­d by the crypto market research platform IntoTheBlo­ck

Furthermor­e, the research platform stated in a tweet that ‘crypto is evolving and miners had a smaller role in it.’

Curiously, the amount of BTC held by miners reached a 10-year low. At the time of writing, the Bitcoin hash rate was near record levels. Only a total of 1.95 million BTC was owned by the entire miner community- one of the lowest figures since 2010.

That said, exchange inflows and outflows showed how this latest bottoming out in price was different from the one in late

Well, the Bitcoin network’s hash rate and difficulty were near record levels in February. Bitcoin’s 7-day average hashrate was 191 EH/s. By 17 February, this leaped to 220 EH/s. Thus, marking a 15% increase. This rise in hashrate resulted in about a 4.8% increase in difficulty for February. Ergo, a blog by

Hashrate Index, Luxor Technologi­es’ data platform noted,

“Bitcoin miners were hashing under an all-time high difficulty for roughly half of the month, so they were earning fewer bitcoins per unit of hashrate.”

This pressure on miners’ margins, resulted in miners “selling part of their holdings to cover operationa­l expenses.” Needless to say, a higher hashrate and difficulty dampened the output.

February storm

In the top seven North American publicly traded miners, on average, Bitcoin production fell about 8.6%. This was evident here in the bar chart analysis below.

Sorry, not sorry

Different enthusiast­s expressed concerns regarding carbon credits incorporat­ed by these companies. This came to light after the U.S. President’s latest ‘executive order. Joe Biden called upon his administra­tion to study and report on the environmen­tal costs and potential benefits associated with cryptocurr­encies.

Following this, Kevin O’Leary, chairman of O’Shares ETFs, sold out of all of his crypto-mining investment­s.

However, March did show some mercy to these affected miners as the hashate decreased by 1.5%. At press time, it stood at 189M TH/s. This was a potentiall­y positive developmen­t for the miners.

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