Bitcoin Hashrate Swells 15% Since Last Week As Analysts Expect Mining Difficulty To Increase

Bitcoin mining difficulty fell by 1.5% last week, following the full recovery of China’s mining ban last year.

China started to crack down on cryptocurrency, prohibiting financial institutions and payment companies from providing services related to cryptocurrency transactions.

China accounted for roughly 75% of the “average monthly hashrate share,” a term used to calculate the computational power needed to mine Bitcoin.

After Beijing effectively banned the country’s cryptocurrency miners in May, more than half of bitcoin’s hashrate disappeared from the global network. But as of the early months of 2022, Bitcoin mining had fully recovered.

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On March 3, the difficulty decreased by 1.5 percent following six straight increases.

Bitcoin’s mining difficulty is currently at approximately 27.55 trillion, and processing power has been up since the last adjustment.

Bitcoin’s hashrate has climbed by approximately 15% since the difficulty adjustment and by 30% since it reached 169 EH/s two weeks ago.

The network’s processing power is currently around 218.11 EH/s, and it has managed to remain a little over the 200 EH/s mark for the last 10 days.

The Relationship Between Hashrate And Bitcoin

The amount of processing power utilized to validate transactions and add blocks in a Proof-of-work (PoW) blockchain is referred to as the “hashrate.”

Bitcoin, one of the world’s most prominent blockchain networks, is a Proof-of-Work (PoW) blockchain that employs mining to produce new currency and validate transactions.

Hashrate may reflect the number of persons or organizations active in the mining process throughout the globe.

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Consequently, as the number of individuals mining bitcoin grows, so does the hashrate.

The hashrate-to-Bitcoin-price link is also precisely proportional. As more individuals purchase and sell Bitcoins in the network, more asset liquidity is needed.

As a result, mining creates more coins, and activity grows as more people buy and sell Bitcoin.

BTC total market cap at $737.87 billion on the daily chart | Source: TradingView.com
Bitcoin Hash Power Predictions

This year, cryptocurrency miners will diversify their income sources and business models.

According to Blockworks, the global hashrate will climb to 327 exahashes per second (EH/s) by the end of 2022, indicating a roughly 60% year-over-year increase.

It also said that by the end of 2023, the hashrate might exceed 587 EH/s.

BTCST Explained

The Bitcoin Standard Hashrate Token (BTCSHT) aims to increase liquidity in the Bitcoin mining market, allowing anyone to gain access to mining rewards and hash power of any size at a low cost.

It is also an asset protocol that allows Bitcoin hashrate assets to be used in decentralized finance. It provides a solid foundation for building particular DeFi trading, lending, and borrowing protocols.

BTC and BTCSHT Price Today

BTCSHT has a current value of $14.42, which is 0.48% lower than yesterday’s price point.

It also has correlating highs of $14.67 and lows of $14.00 regarding the current mining power and stability of Bitcoin.

Meanwhile, Bitcoin (BTC) is currently priced at $39,170, below the $40,000 mark but is still at its support level. It has a 24 hour high reaching $39,254 and lows of about $37,589, as per CoinDesk data.

Featured image from Bitcoin News, chart from TradingView.com

Bitcoin Hashrate Climbs To New High As Price Recovers Above $42,000

Bitcoin’s hash rate has continued its recent climb, riding the waves to new highs. The digital asset that has been suffering following the market crash seems to only be suffering in price as it has kept up the pace in other avenues. Coming out of the weekend, bitcoin has recorded a significant spike in its hash rate, leading to a new high of 248.11TH/s in a period of 24 hours.

Bitcoin Hash Rate Touches New High

Between February 11th and February 12th, the bitcoin hashrate recorded a new high. Miners who have been an integral part of the network since inception have continued to increase their support for it. Not only does mining profit the miners through block rewards and transaction fees, but they also help to secure the network with their activities which is why the recent surge is important.

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The hash rate has continued to trend around the same level for the better part of the month, fluctuating above and below 200 TH/s. On Saturday however, Blockchain.com reported that the hash rate had jumped 31% in the space of a day. It is one of the most significant growth recorded on the blockchain in recent times.

In a matter of one year alone, the hashrate has grown 54%. This is coming up from the China crackdown on mining that saw the hash rate from the region crash to near zero. The digital asset has since recovered from this and surged towards new highs.

With more power coming from the computing machines of miners, the hash rate has continued to climb. It is, in turn, helping to straighten the bitcoin network, an all-around win for the asset.

Why Is Hash Rate Rising?

The rise in the hash rate can be attributed to the number of miners that are coming into the space. Gone are the days when bitcoin mining was carried out on computers with graphics cards. Nowadays, there are entire farms dedicated to the activity of thousands of mining machines all connected to give the miners a better shot at mining a block. It has grown into a robust, billion-dollar industry.

BTC settles above $42K | Source: BTCUSD on TradingView.com

On the flip side of this, small-time miners are also ramping up their activities. Although their small hash rate makes it harder to make a profit, these small miners are finding refuge in mining pools where they pool their hash rate together, thereby increasing their chances of finding a block.

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This has worked out for a couple of miners who have been able to mine full blocks, receiving the full reward, despite their small hash rate. With this, more small miners are coming online but the real values are coming from the big players.

It is expected that bitcoin’s hash rate will continue to rise as more players move into the mining industry. It has become a refuge for investors who want to invest in bitcoin-adjacent products. Currently, Russia has overtaken China and the United States to become the country with the highest hash rate.

Featured image from CoinDesk, chart from TradingView.com

Is The Bitcoin Hashrate Recovering From Kazakhstan’s Crisis? Fear Abides

As the government of Kazakhstan claims the country’s power services are stabilizing, thus the Bitcoin hashrate could be on its way to recovery. However, is the situation stable enough for Bitcoin mining yet? Will it ever be?

A Recap

Just a few days after the Bitcoin hashrate reached an All-Time High, thus recovering from the China ban on crypto mining, another authoritarian crisis hit the bitcoin mining industry in Kazakhstan, taking the hash to drop 15% in 10 days.

The country has been the second-largest bitcoin mining spot (after the U.S.) with 18% of the global BTC hashrate ever since China’s miners were forced to find new locations with cheap energy costs.

Parallel to the crypto market down movement, on Friday 7th the price of BTC dropped to $41,000 while the coin’s mining in Kazakhstan went dark as the government forced a power and internet shutdown to gain control over raising protests, which had turned violent.

The protestors were reportedly voicing their anger toward new high fuel costs.

The news has been reported everywhere without complete certainty of what’s happening. Borders, the internet, and other means of communication were blocked, so the information doesn’t reach the world so easily.

The latest reports had shown that the uprising has been tamed as Russia’s President Putin stood proudly as the military ally who sent paratroopers last week. A demonstration of power through force.

President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev called it “an attempted coup d’etat”, Reuters reported. He alleged that “It became clear that the main goal was to undermine the constitutional order and to seize power.”

Both countries had referred to the uprising as a foreign-backed insurrection, failing to blame someone –or somewhere– in specific.

“Old man out!” was the protestors’ favorite chant referring to the former Nazarbayev who still holds power.

“We are ordinary people. We are not terrorists!!” read a banner from 40 activists.

Related Reading | Could Kazakhstan Turmoil Cause Another Bitcoin Hash Crash?

Is The Crisis Over?

The government gave “shoot to kill” orders.

In short: no, the real crisis cannot be over. The violence, however, might have stopped.

Reportedly, 164 people (3 children) have been killed, over 2,000 injured, 7,939 were detained.

“The violence has been by far the worst seen in the country since independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.” The Telegraph reported

“One man who had ventured out to find food was shot dead, according to credible reports, and a Kazakh media group said that one of its drivers had been killed.”

It wasn’t simply an internet shutdown: they was no way to buy food, banks were closed in central Almaty, going out was too dangerous, even ambulances were too afraid to work past the 7 pm curfew.

It also wasn’t simply about a rise in fuel prices, as the UK-based newspaper reported, the citizen’s despair also comes from “frustration at economic stagnation, revulsion at elite corruption and anger at the dilapidated state of social services and healthcare despite Kazakhstan’s oil and mineral wealth”.

The National Security Committee of Kazakhstan claimed that the situation has “stabilized and is under control” and declared the date as a day of mourning.

However, others report that the protests enter week 2.

Bitcoin Mining In Kazakhstan

On the miners’ end, the government intends to tighten rules and introduce extra taxes starting this year.

Currently, reports are showing mixed signals about the impact of these events on the industry.

An analysis by CoinDesk using data from mining pool BTC.com alleged that the lost Bitcoin hashrate of top mining pools had been nearly recovered, narrowing the loss to 2.2%.

Data from BTC.com shared by CoinDesk

The portal reported Alan Dordzhiev, head of the Kazakh National Association of Blockchain and Data Center Industry, had told them that the situation had been “almost resolved” and despite the blackouts, crypto mining regions were “totally fine”.

However, internet watchdog NetBlocks reported that a new blackout happened:

 

And NetBlocks’ director of research of internet monitor Isik Mater told Forkast that restorations made in the country “are limited, unpredictable and don’t satisfy the requirement for a stable connectivity needed for cryptocurrency mining or blockchain applications,”

The current hashrate measured by Blockchain.com reads 176 EH/s, still away from the 208 million EH/s ATH on January 1st –but not endangering.

Kazakhstan miners had been facing power restrictions. They might have already started to set their sight overseas, and beyond the service’s stability, the ongoing situation is unlikely to make them feel safe and welcomed.

Related Reading | Bitcoin Hashrate Approaches New ATH, What Does It Mean For The Price?

Bitcoin has shed over 19% in value in the past two weeks, the current price is at $41613 in the daily chart | Source: BTCUSD on TradingView

Despite Red Bitcoin, On-Chain Signals Flip Green

Bitcoin on-chain signals have remained green despite the recent red week. Bitcoin’s price had taken a plunge towards $40K and had brought a lot of losses with it as billions of dollars in long positions were liquidated on December 4th in one of the sharpest declines of the year. Mostly this has brought down a number of metrics associated with the asset but on-chain signals remain resistant.

On-chain data all ranging from miner revenues, transaction fees, hashrate, and daily transaction volumes have all shown positive trends for bitcoin. None of this has been affected by the price decline.

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Hashrate Continues Recovery Trend

Bitcoin hashrate had taken a big heat with the China crackdown on mining that took place earlier in the year. The region had gone from providing about 70% of the mining power to almost zero in a matter of weeks, leaving the hashrate to suffer greatly. This has since been rectified as bitcoin miners have found new locations to resume their mining activities.

BTC hashrate recovers post-market crash | Source: Arcane Research

Since then, hashrate has been gradually picking back up and in the past week saw a significant increase. Bitcoin hashrate is up for the past seven days after the first difficulty reduction following ten difficulty adjustments. As the difficulty has dropped, so has the profitability of mining activities increased. Given this, more miners have gotten back in the game and set up their mining rigs once more, leading to a rise in hashrate.

Arcane Research also reported that this increased hashrate has led to an increase in block production rate. As more miners come back on board, an average of 6.46 blocks have been created each hour in the past week. This represents a significant increase of 11% in the same time frame.

BTC loses footing at $50,000 | Source: BTCUSD on TradingView.com
Bitcoin Transaction Fees Rise

Bitcoin transactions fees have remained low through the past weeks, but there was a recorded increase in fees in the past seven days. On average, bitcoin transaction fees grew by 33%. This growth however does not do much for miner revenue. Even though fees are up, they are still relatively meager and only bring in about 1.7% of the total miner revenues.

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Average transaction value also jumped in the past week. As investors rushed to sell their holdings during the crash, the average transaction volume climbed by 8.3%. This was mostly due to holders who hold larger volumes moving their BTC to exchanges to sell, not only increasing average transaction volume, but also transaction fees at the same time.

Bitcoin daily miner revenues in the first week of December was $52,271,223 compared to daily revenues of $49,975,895 from the previous week. Fees per day, as well as transactions per day, were up at $891,499 and 276,680 respectively.

Featured image from PSU Watch, charts from Arcane Research and TradingView.com