Bitcoin miners are wrestling with mounting pressure as revenue dynamics and network difficulty have diverged sharply. Over the past month-plus since mid-October, mining revenue has slid 11%—a concerning signal that could trigger widespread capitulation across the sector. When miners start bailing, the network response typically follows: difficulty adjustments tend to lag behind, creating windows of instability. This squeeze between falling profitability and sticky difficulty levels is exactly what tests miner resilience during market downturns.
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GraphGuru
· 13h ago
Mining income drops 11%, really can't hold on anymore, difficulty is stubbornly stuck there, this contrast is too uncomfortable...
Miners need to hold on, or else difficulty adjustments will be delayed again, when will this vicious cycle end?
Recently, with income declining, it feels like a large number of small miners won't be able to hold up and will have to run away.
The difficulty stagnation problem has never been properly solved, and it keeps causing trouble every time.
Really don't know when this round will recover, miners are under so much pressure, a bit worried.
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LiquidationWatcher
· 13h ago
Can you still hold on with an 11% drop in mining income? It shows that true players have already prepared, and only rookie miners should panic.
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FlashLoanLarry
· 14h ago
Are the miners about to collapse? Cutting 11% directly, while the difficulty is still stuck and not moving. This window period is really a meat grinder.
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CryptoCross-TalkClub
· 14h ago
Laughing to death, miners are now caught between difficulty and income, and this feeling is truly unparalleled.
The difficulty hasn't even reacted yet, and the income has already disappeared, a typical "system delay."
It's really a test for miners now—let's see who can survive this darkest hour.
Mining also needs to emphasize "resilience"? Then just switch to being a stand-up comedian, since both are about finding joy in hardship.
The pressure is so intense that once the difficulty adjusts, even the yellow flowers will have withered.
Bitcoin miners are wrestling with mounting pressure as revenue dynamics and network difficulty have diverged sharply. Over the past month-plus since mid-October, mining revenue has slid 11%—a concerning signal that could trigger widespread capitulation across the sector. When miners start bailing, the network response typically follows: difficulty adjustments tend to lag behind, creating windows of instability. This squeeze between falling profitability and sticky difficulty levels is exactly what tests miner resilience during market downturns.