CryptoQuant CEO Ki Young Ju explained on April 30 the dilemma facing Bitcoin miners post-halving. According to the researcher, miners are now at a crossroad – they can either capitulate to current market conditions or await a potential BTC price increase.
Ju expressed his concerns on X that Bitcoin miners were holding onto their crypto holdings despite plummeting revenues. Revenues have dropped to 2023 levels due to the just concluded Bitcoin Halving, which slashed block rewards from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC.
#Bitcoin miners' revenue has dropped to levels seen in early 2023 following the halving.
Now they have two options: 1. Capitulation, or 2. Waiting for a rise in $BTC price.
There are no signs of capitulation for now. pic.twitter.com/8GrYk7zcN1
— Ki Young Ju (@ki_young_ju) April 30, 2024
While the miners saw temporary higher revenue of over $100 million on the halving day, it has since reduced, with Ju indicating that “there are no signs of capitulation for now.”
Bitcoin miners capitulate when the price drops and the less-efficient miners are forced off the network because the Bitcoin they earn is not worth the cost to mine. This can lead them to sell the reserve Bitcoin, resulting in further price drops.
On the other hand, if miners wait for a price increase, they are essentially hoping that Bitcoin will rise in the future, making it more profitable for them to continue mining.
The #Bitcoin miners I know is a group of humam beings who have the strongest faith on bitcoion and cryptos, so capitulation is never an option. Me either. https://t.co/FfAF6FAbeb
— fat_bear@okx (@okx_fat_bear) April 30, 2024
BTC trades at $60K at press time, down 4.46% in the last 24 hours, 9.47% in the past seven days, and 17.1% since hitting its
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