Author: Liam Akiba Wright
Compiled by: Chopper, Foresight News
Recently, a comprehensive Bitcoin miner stress indicator circulated on X platform dropped to a historically rare zone of extreme pressure, once again confirming a classic bull-bear cycle logic: market bottoms are often accompanied by collective pressure on miners.
The practical impact of this cycle is more direct. If the hash price continues to weaken, the industry will face a survival test. Only high-quality mining companies can maintain continuous operation of their hash rate equipment, avoid forced Bitcoin sales, and wait for mining revenue to recover.
Analyst Gaah issued a recent signal that the Bitcoin miner cycle comprehensive stress indicator has dropped to a new low in 2026, entering a historically deeply undervalued zone. BitcoinNewsCom supplemented this view, describing it as a composite indicator of the Puell Multiple and the Inverse Miner Capitulation Index.

The comparison between the Bitcoin miner cycle comprehensive stress indicator and the Bitcoin price shows a temporal correlation between mining profitability pressure and major turning points in the market cycle. Source: Investemais
This composite indicator is an observation tool for miner stress built by the analyst. Its core underlying indicators remain hash price, network difficulty, total network hash rate, and mining company balance sheets. It can only reflect the degree of industry pressure and cannot alone determine if the market has bottomed out. What truly determines the industry's direction is the profit pressure that forces miners into actions like shutdowns and coin sales.
Hash Price: The Core Yardstick for Mining Profitability
The Puell Multiple is used to calculate the ratio of miners' block reward income to the annual average price of newly issued Bitcoin, intuitively reflecting the current cash flow status of mining.
This perspective is very applicable for miners because they run cash-based businesses. Electricity, server hosting, debt repayments, machine maintenance, repairs, and personnel costs all compete for market share with block reward income. When the dollar value of rewards declines, weaker miners are often the first to be eliminated.
However, hash price is a more intuitive measure of profitability. According to Luxor's Hashrate Index definition, hash price refers to the daily USD revenue that 1 PH/s of hash rate can generate, comprehensively including four variables: block subsidy, transaction fees, network difficulty, and the current BTC price. Even if the Bitcoin price hasn't broken below previous lows, unit hash rate revenue can still continuously shrink as long as difficulty increases, transaction fees remain low, and machine energy consumption is high.
Mining profitability has been tightening recently. The June 1st Hashrate Index weekly report showed hash price fell 9% weekly to $32.56 / PH/s/day, with the six-month forward average price only $31.71. Two weeks later on June 15th, data showed a slight rebound to $33.74, but the forward average remained at $32.13.
This slight rebound did not erase industry differentiation. Hashrate Index calculations show that new-generation low-power miners with unit energy consumption below 19 J/TH earn about $81 per megawatt of hash rate, while older, high-power models (25–38 J/TH) earn only $43 per megawatt. Under the same Bitcoin price environment, low-cost new mining farms can operate stably, while older, high-energy-consumption farms approach shutdown thresholds.
This huge profit gap transforms paper bottom indicators into real survival tests for companies. Mining companies holding new-generation miners, enjoying low electricity costs, having flexible curtailment agreements, and possessing sufficient cash flow can withstand the cycle and wait for difficulty adjustments. Companies relying on old equipment, facing high hosting costs, and operating with high debt have almost no buffer; once hash price remains low, they can only passively reduce production.
Who Will Be Eliminated?
Miner pressure has a self-adjusting mechanism, but the process accompanies industry pains. After a large number of miners shut down, the total network hash rate declines. If the hash rate contraction continues until the difficulty adjustment window, Bitcoin's network mining difficulty automatically decreases, and the unit block reward for surviving miners increases accordingly.
This is also the underlying logic behind the miner capitulation wave often seen at bear market bottoms: inefficient players exit first, and surviving mining companies share more block rewards after difficulty decreases. As long as the Bitcoin price and transaction fees don't keep falling, industry profit margins can gradually stabilize.
Second-quarter 2026 data has confirmed the effectiveness of this adjustment mechanism. The Hashrate Index's Q2 heatmap shows this round of hash rate decline stems primarily from profit pressure at the economic level. The network's 30-day moving average hash rate fell from 1066 EH/s in Q1 to 1004 EH/s in Q2, a quarterly decline of 5.8%. The report estimates that many old miners above 25 J/TH have turned gross profit negative, with approximately 252 EH/s of marginal inefficient hash rate in a shutdown state.
The Bitcoin price itself remains the cornerstone of the economic system. CryptoSlate market data shows that as of July 6, 2026, Bitcoin traded at $63,007, with a market capitalization of $1.26 trillion and a market share of 58.0%. However, miner profitability depends on a specific combination of factors: price, transaction fees, mining difficulty, electricity costs, and machine efficiency.
If the hash price remains at low levels around $30, the primary source of pressure is miner curtailment. Miners with high electricity costs or old machines may shut down hash power during unprofitable periods, especially if electricity can be resold or redirected. The second is miner cash flow. Miners holding Bitcoin can sell it or use it as collateral for loans, further increasing pressure during periods of already tight liquidity.
The third point is consolidation. Low-cost miners, better-capitalized public companies, and operators with newer machines can hold out longer than weaker competitors and potentially acquire mining farms, power contracts, or market share after difficulty decreases and reward distribution becomes fairer.
The fourth trend is the transition to AI and high-performance computing. Many mining companies are no longer solely reliant on Bitcoin mining for profits, using bear markets to host AI servers and open a second growth curve. However, only mining companies possessing land, power, cooling facilities, stable clients, and sufficient funds have practical value in implementing this transition; persistently low hash prices significantly increase the strategic value of this transition path. Wall Street capital has already positioned itself in mining company targets with AI computing businesses, even if the related data centers haven't been built yet.
Signals to Watch
The mining industry stress composite indicator is more suitable as an early warning signal; it cannot precisely predict the timing of the bottom. It indicates that mining industry revenue pressure has reached levels seen in previous stress cycles. But it does not indicate whether the market has fully repriced this pressure.
The subsequent signals are more specific: whether the hash price can recover to levels just above $30, whether mining difficulty will continue to decrease, whether the hash rate will stabilize, whether miners will sell more Bitcoin, and whether mining companies' AI computing deployments are genuine growth narratives or mere fundraising tools.
If the above indicators improve simultaneously, looking back, this round of miner pressure will have been just a bottoming phase. If the data continues to deteriorate, the industry will undergo a deeper round of reshuffling, with inefficient hash rate share continuously shrinking, benefiting surviving players after network-wide difficulty decreases.
Therefore, this bottom signal can also serve as a solvency test. Although the chart may be eye-catching due to its similarity to past cycle lows, if the recovery takes longer than expected, the hash price will determine which miners can continue to survive.





