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Cryptocurrency News Articles

Bitcoin (BTC) Price Trades Around $65,000 as Selling Pressure Mounts, Miners Offload Holdings

Jun 21, 2024 at 08:03 am

Bitcoin (BTC) price trades around $65,000 as selling pressure mounts for the largest cryptocurrency, which has altcoins nuking hard.

Bitcoin (BTC) Price Trades Around $65,000 as Selling Pressure Mounts, Miners Offload Holdings

Bitcoin price trades around $65,000 as selling pressure mounts for the largest cryptocurrency, which has been impacting altcoins heavily. For altcoins to stop crashing, BTC needs to hold strong.

While $65k-$66k seems to be the sweet spot for the largest cryptocurrency by market cap, a drop to $60k can be expected in the near future. Even a deeper flush to $50K isn’t out of the picture for Bitcoin, which would only spell trouble for altcoins.

This lack of enthusiasm and excitement in the market isn’t new either. A correction should be expected after prices rallied to new all-time highs (ATHs) a few months ago. Also, summer tends to see a lull in activity; hence, the adage ‘sell in May and go away.’ This seasonally weaker historical performance tends to go on until October.

As noted by Kaiako research, “Both crypto and traditional financial markets are experiencing the typical summer trading lull. Historically, Q3 has had the lowest volume by a significant margin, with cumulative BTC trade volume over 40% below the highest-volume quarter.”

So, for now, Bitcoin should be expected to stagnate and experience muted volatility. The crypto asset is also gaining maturity with the launch of Spot Bitcoin ETF and BlackRock’s IBIT overtaking crypto-native Grayscale to become the world’s largest Bitcoin ETF.

Another reason for the ongoing weakness in the market could be attributed to Bitcoin miners offloading their BTC holdings due to a decline in revenue after the halving event.

Miners Driving Bitcoin Sell-Offs?

The fourth halving, which occurred on April 19, slashed Bitcoin miner rewards from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC per mined block.

Besides the rewards getting halved, miner revenues are negatively affected by the declining transaction fees. As of writing, Bitcoin’s average transaction fees have been 24.4 sats/vB or 0.000063 BTC ($4.11), as per Bitinfocharts. Right before and right after the halving, the fees rallied to their almost $128 peak, but since then, they have been going down and keeping below $5. There was a small burst to $83.7 on June 7, but fees are back to previous low levels.

With that, Bitcoin mining profitability is now down at 0.0498 USD/Day for 1 THash/s. In the second half of 2023, profitability remained between $0.05 and $08, only to increase in anticipation of the halving, surging to $0.175 on the very next day. But mining profitability is now making new lows.

So, it makes sense that with network hashrate at 630.4 Ehash/s keeping around the ATH at 732.289 Th/s hit on May 24 while revenues have fallen substantially, miners are choosing to sell their BTC to fund their daily operations.

Earlier this month, Marathon Digital, the largest U.S.-listed bitcoin miner, reported selling more than 60% of all the BTC it mined since halving. While Riot Platforms didn’t sell any, CleanSpark sold 2.43 BTC.

However, with BTC mining cost coming in at $83,000, it is expected that the price of bitcoin may not remain under this level for a long time. Data provider CryptoQuant believes sustained low revenues and high hashrate may imply a potential market bottom.

JPMorgan analysts also noted that the hashprice, which measures just how much a Bitcoin miner can expect to earn from a particular quantity of hashrate, is currently 15% below the lows seen during the bear market bottom in December 2022. This, the analysts said, is “unsustainable,” and as such, they “expect hashprice to increase in the coming weeks as the network hashrate declines.”

A Shift in Mining Sector, Price Action

Amidst all this, the market cap of 14 US-listed bitcoin miners reached a record $22.8bln after they rallied in the first half of this month, as per JPMorgan analysts.

Core Scientific led the pack with 117% gains. The miner recently rejected a $1.6 bln buying offer from AI cloud provider CoreWeave, with which it had a 12-year, $3.5 billion partnership to host CoreWeave’s AI-related services. Many in the Bitcoin mining world, such as IREN and Hut 8, have been pursuing AI to diversify their businesses. Core Scientific was followed by TeraWulf and IREN, which jumped 80% and 70%, respectively. Argo Blockchain was the only one that fell during this time.

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