Bitcoin

Focuses on news, price analysis, technological evolution, and market trends within the Bitcoin ecosystem. It explores its role and influence in the global financial system.

Bitcoin Mining Difficulty Drops for the Third Time in a Row. What Does This Mean?

Bitcoin mining difficulty has decreased for the third consecutive time, dropping by 0.74% to 148.2 trillion on December 11. This means miners now need to compute approximately 148 trillion hash functions on average to add a new block and earn the 3.125 BTC reward (around $281,000 at current rates). This prolonged decline in difficulty, last seen in 2024 after the halving event, reflects reduced mining activity. The global hashrate has fallen from its peak of 1.31 Zh/s on October 24 to 1.14 Zh/s, indicating some miners are switching off unprofitable equipment. According to Anton Gonterev, Commercial Director of Intelion, this adjustment reflects the market adapting to Bitcoin's lower price. Since reaching approximately $126,000 on October 6, Bitcoin's price has fallen 28% to $90,000. Despite this, mining difficulty is still over 40% higher than a year ago, indicating sustained structural demand for computational power and continued investor interest in mining. The current correction is seen as a normal industry dynamic where less efficient operators are gradually leaving the network. Mining is shifting towards players with modern equipment, stable infrastructure, and controlled project economics, particularly those with access to predictable, competitive energy prices. These efficient operators remain stable despite short-term fluctuations in Bitcoin's price or mining difficulty.

RBK-crypto12/11 14:33

Bitcoin Mining Difficulty Drops for the Third Time in a Row. What Does This Mean?

RBK-crypto12/11 14:33

Why Isn't Asia's Largest Bitcoin Treasury Company Metaplanet Buying the Dip?

Metaplanet, the Japanese company known as the "Asian MicroStrategy," has paused its Bitcoin accumulation strategy for ten consecutive weeks since September 30, despite the recent market correction. While giants like MicroStrategy continued buying—adding 10,624 BTC at an average of $90,615—Metaplanet shifted its focus to stock buybacks and capital structure improvements. This pause reflects a broader industry trend where Bitcoin treasury firms (DATs) are prioritizing risk management over aggressive accumulation. DATs have faced significant pressure, with median stock prices dropping 43% and some falling over 99%, leading Galaxy to warn of a "Darwinian phase" for the sector. Metaplanet’s tactical halt aims to protect shareholder value and avoid further dilution, especially after its mNAV fell below 1x. The company also seeks to avoid accounting losses under Japan’s conservative standards, as its Bitcoin holdings have over $500 million in unrealized losses with an average cost of $108,000. Instead, Metaplanet is leveraging Japan’s low-interest environment to develop innovative financing tools, such as the "Mercury" perpetual preferred stock offering a 4.9% yield—ten times local bank rates—with 73% of proceeds directed to Bitcoin purchases. It also uses Moving Strike Warrants (MSW) to raise capital without violating Japan’s market restrictions. The company benefits from unique advantages: yen depreciation enhances Bitcoin’s appeal as a hedge, and Japanese investors use tax-free NISA accounts to gain BTC exposure via Metaplanet stock. Major institutions like Capital Group have increased stakes, seeing lower financing costs and higher return potential compared to Western counterparts. However, short-term risks remain, including potential sell pressure if MSCI removes Metaplanet from its Japan Index due to high Bitcoin exposure. Ultimately, the pause is a strategic recalibration, not a retreat, highlighting the DAT sector’s maturation from aggressive accumulation to sustainable, risk-aware growth.

marsbit12/11 12:43

Why Isn't Asia's Largest Bitcoin Treasury Company Metaplanet Buying the Dip?

marsbit12/11 12:43

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