Bitcoin (BTC) mining difficulty reached an all-time high of 53.91 trillion units after the latest difficulty adjustment on July 12. It is a measure of how difficult it is to mine Bitcoin blocks.
The blockchain adjusts its difficulty every two weeks to maintain its processing time of 10 minutes. When the network’s processing power increases, it adjusts to make mining challenging, reducing the profitability for individual miners.
The latest adjustment will add to the pressure on miners who have been selling off their mined BTC since June. Some analysts suspect that the lack of miner accumulation has likely restricted an uptrend in BTC price.
With the latest difficulty adjustment, the profitability of medium and small scale miners will likely drop into negative territory, forcing them to temporarily turn off some of their ASIC miners.
The potential capitulation of weaker miners could finally enable larger miners to accumulate Bitcoin, which may reduce the mining selling pressure.
The Hash Ribbon indicator created by independent analyst, Charles Edwards, tracks the 30 and 60-day moving average (MA) of the network’s hashrate. When the 30-day MA falls below the 60-day MA, it is a signal that miner capitulation may be occurring, meaning unprofitable miners are moving out.
The two lines are marginally close to a crossover and the increase in difficulty may finally provide the catalyst for capitulation of weaker miners.
The exodus of weaker miners would bring more rewards for the more efficient miners, potentially allowing them to save a portion of their output instead of selling.
Recently, miners were seen unloading record amounts of BTC to exchanges. According to a K33 Research report, publicly listed miners sold 100% or more of their
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