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Bitcoin price plummets while miner hash rate soars to all-time highs

The overall security of the Bitcoin protocol, or hash rate, hit a new high of 158 exahash per second despite the price being down over 50% year to date.

Bitcoin miners can’t stop, won’t stop. The Bitcoin (BTC) hash rate continues to surge to new all-time highs, despite a heavy price drawdown. 

The Bitcoin mining hash rate peaked at 258 exahashes per second (EH/s) on Oct. 4, according to Braiins Insights, a mining data tools and metrics company. Although the Bitcoin price is down 58% year-to-date against the United States dollar, the mining hash rate is up 43%.

The past 3 months Hashrate. Source: Braiins. 

Bitcoin Gandalf from the marketing team at Braiins told Cointelegraph that, “The hash rate hitting another all-time high shows that miners are bullish about the future prospects of Bitcoin.” Nonetheless, the current macroeconomic environment could pose an issue, as “the present isn’t so rosy for Bitcoin miners,” Gandalf said, adding:

“Bitcoin continues to trade in this tight band between $19,000–$20,000 and this recent increase in hash rate will result in a sharp upward adjustment in mining difficulty meaning that miner margins will be further squeezed.”

In a series of tweets, mining engineers and hobbyists shared their thoughts regarding the hash rate hitting all-time highs while the price remains low. Rob W of Bitcoin mining company Upstream Data summed up the sentiment: 

Market analyst Zack Voell explained that the surging hash rate could be as a result of “XPs coming online.” The S19 XP Antminer is the latest model from Bitmain, one of the world’s most popular Bitcoin mining hardware suppliers.

The number of hashes produced in a second is commonly referred to as the hash rate. In Bitcoin speak, hash rate is a critical security metric as well as one that many BTC miners keep their eyes on.

In simple terms, the more hashing — or computing power — that the network churns out, the greater the overall security of Bitcoin. As a result, Bitcoin is more resistant to attack, the most common of which is known as a 51% attack.

Currently, more and more miners are coming online to attempt to solve valid blocks to receive the Bitcoin block reward, which is currently 6.25 BTC, roughly $120,000. Blocks are solved and added to the Bitcoin blockchain on average every 10 minutes.

Related: Nuclear and gas fastest growing energy sources for Bitcoin mining: Data

The difficult adjustment determines the rate at which blocks are solved. It fluctuates roughly every two weeks and is expected to increase on Oct. 10 based on the surging hash rate. The difficulty adjustment has been on a steady march upward in 2022 — meaning blocks are, on average, getting harder to solve — after falling for the first time in March 2022.

In sum, despite the fact that the Bitcoin price continues to wallow under $20,000, more and more miners find value in supporting the network. James Check, an analyst at Glassnode, explained in a tweet, “With hash rate pushing to new all-time-highs once again, despite all the promises to the contrary, it appears that #Bitcoin is still not dead.”

Crypto sentiment index drops to October levels as Bitcoin dips under $92K

BTC price still not at ‘max pain’ — 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

Bitcoin has plenty of obstacles to weather in the current macro storm as two-year weekly close lows remain inches away.

Bitcoin (BTC) starts a new week in a precarious place as global macro instability dictates the mood.

After sealing a weekly close just inches above $19,000, the largest cryptocurrency still lacks direction as nerves heighten over the resilience of the global financial system.

Last week proved a testing time for risk asset investors, with gloomy economic data flowing from the United States and, moreover, Europe.

The Eurozone thus provides the backdrop to the latest concerns of market participants, who are watching as the financial buoyancy of major banks is called into question.

With the war in Ukraine only escalating and winter approaching, it is perhaps understandable that hardly anyone is optimistic — what could the impact be on Bitcoin and crypto?

BTC/USD remains below its prior halving cycle’s all-time high, and as comparisons to the 2018 bear market flow in, so too is talk of a new multi-year low.

Cointelegaph takes a look at five BTC price factors to watch in the coming days with Bitcoin still firmly below $20,000.

Spot price avoids multi-year low weekly close

Despite the bearish mood, Bitcoin’s weekly close could have been worse — at just above $19,000, the largest cryptocurrency managed to add a modest $250 to last week’s closing price, data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView shows.

BTC/USD 1-week candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingView

That prior close had nonetheless been the lowest since November 2020 on weekly timeframes, and as such, traders continue to fear that the worst is yet to come.

“The bears remained in full swing last night during the Asian, while the bulls failed to give us any good rallies to work off on,” popular trader Crypto Tony wrote in part of a Twitter update on the day.

Others agreed with a summary which concluded that BTC/USD was in a “low volatility” zone which would necessitate a breakout sooner or later. All that was left was to decide on the direction.

“Next big move is up,” Credible Crypto responded.

“Typically prior to these major moves and after capitulation we see a period of low volatility before the next big move begins.”

As Cointelegraph reported, the weekend was already tipped to provide a boost of volatility as suggested by Bollinger Bands data. This came hand in hand with rising volume, a key ingredient in sustaining a potential move.

“Weekly chart BTC shows a massive increased volume since the beginning of the third quarter + weekly bullish divergence on one of the most reliable time frames,” fellow trading account Doctor Profit concluded.

“Bitcoin price increase is just a matter of time.”

Not everyone eyed an impending comeback, however. In predictions over the weekend, meanwhile, trader Il Capo of Crypto gave the area between $14,000 and $16,000 as a longer-term target.

BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Il Capo of Crypto/ Twitter

“If this was the real bottom... bitcoin should be trading close to 25k- 26k by now,” trading account Profit Blue argued, showing a chart with a double bottom structure potentially in the making on the 2-day chart.

Credit Suisse unnerves as dollar strength goes nowhere

Beyond crypto, attention is coalescing around the fate of major global banks, in particular Credit Suisse and Deutsche Bank.

Worries over liquidity resulted in emergency public reassurances from the CEO of the former, with executives reportedly spending the weekend calming major investors.

Bank failures are a sore spot for underwater hodlers — it was government bailouts of lenders in 2008 which originally spawned Bitcoin’s creation.

With history increasingly looking to rhyme nearly fifteen years later, the Credit Suisse saga is not going unnoticed.

“We can't see inside CeFi firm Credit Suisse -- JUST LIKE we could not see inside of CeFi firms Celsius, 3AC, etc.,” entrepreneur Mark Jeffery tweeted on the day, comparing the situation to the crypto fund meltdowns earlier this year.

For Samson Mow, CEO of Bitcoin startup JAN3, the current environment could yet give Bitcoin its time to shine in a crisis instead of staying correlated to other risk assets.

“Bitcoin price is already pushed down to the limit, well below 200 WMA,” he argued, referring to the 200-week moving average long lost as bear market support.

“We’ve had contagion from UST/3AC and leverage flushed already. BTC is massively shorted as a hedge. Even if Credit Suisse / Deutsche Bank collapse & trigger a financial crisis, can’t see us going much lower.”

Nonetheless, with instability already rampant throughout the global economy and geopolitical tensions only increasing, Bitcoin markets are voting with their feet.

The U.S. dollar index (DXY), still just 3 points off its latest twenty-year highs, continues to circle round for a potential rematch after limiting corrective moves in recent days.

Looking further out, macro economist Henrik Zeberg repeated a theory that sees DXY temporarily losing ground in a major boost for equities. This, however, would not last.

“In early 2023 DXY will once again rally with target of ~120. This will be Deflationary Bust - and Equities will crash in a larger bust than during 2007-09,” he wrote in part of a tweet.

“Largest Deflationary Bust since 1929.”
U.S. dollar index (DXY) 1-day candle chart. Source: TradingView

Miner revenue measure nears all-time low

With Bitcoin price suppression grinding on, it is less than surprising to see miners struggle to maintain profitability.

At one point in September, monthly selling from miners was in excess of 8,500 BTC, and while this number subsequently cooled, data shows that for many, the situation is precarious.

“Bitcoin miner revenue per TeraHash on the edge of all time lows,” Dylan LeClair, senior analyst at digital asset fund UTXO Management, revealed at the weekend.

“Margin squeeze.”
Bitcoin miner revenue per terahash chart. Source: Dylan LeClair/ Twitter

The scenario is an interesting one for the mining ecosystem, which currently deploys more hash rate than at almost any time in history.

Estimates from monitoring resource MiningPoolStats put current Bitcoin network hash rate at 261 exahashes per second (EH/s), only marginally below the all-time high of 298 EH/s seen in September.

Competition among miners also remains healthy, as evidenced by difficulty adjustments. While seeing its first decrease since July last week, difficulty is set to add an estimated 3.7% in seven days’ time, taking it to new all-time highs of its own.

Nonetheless, for economist, trader and entrepreneur, Alex Krueger, it may yet be premature to breathe a sigh of relief.

“Bitcoin hash rate hitting all time highs while price goes down is a recipe for disaster rather than a cause for celebration,” he wrote in a thread about the miner data last month.

“As miner profitability gets squeezed, odds of another round of miner capitulation increase in the event of a downmove. But hopium never dies.”
Bitcoin network fundamentals overview (screenshot). Source: BTC.com

GBTC "discount" hits new all-time low

Echoing the institutional exodus from BTC exposure this year, the space’s largest institutional investment vehicle has never been such a bargain.

The Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC), which in the good times traded far above the Bitcoin spot price, is now being offered at its biggest-ever discount to BTC/USD.

According to data from Coinglass, on Sep. 30, the GBTC “Premium” — now in fact a discount — hit -36.38%, implying a BTC price of just $11,330.

The Premium has now been negative since February 2021.

Analyzing the data, Venturefounder, a contributor to on-chain analytics platform CryptoQuant, described the GBTC drop as “absolutely wild.”

“Yet still no sign of GBTC discount bottoming or reversing,” he commented.

“Institutions are not even biting for $12K BTC (locked for 6 months).”
GBTC premium vs. asset holdings vs. BTC/USD chart. Source: Coinglass

Cointelegraph has long tracked GBTC, with owner Grayscale attempting to get legal permission to convert and launch it as a spot exchange-traded fund (ETF) — something still forbidden by U.S. regulators.

For the meantime, however, the lack of institutional appetite for BTC exposure is something of an elephant in the room.

“Objectively, I would say there isn't much interest in $BTC from U.S. based institutional investors until $GBTC starts getting bid closer to net asset value,” LeClair wrote last week.

Charting Bitcoin's "max pain" scenario

While it is safe to say that a fresh Bitcoin price drop would cause many a hodler to question their investment strategy, it remains to be seen whether this bear market will copy those which have gone before.

Related: Analyst on $17.6K BTC price bottom: Bitcoin 'not there yet'

For analyst and statistician Willy Woo, creator of data resource Woobull, the next bottom could have a close relationship with hodler capitulation.

Previously in Bitcoin’s history, bear market bottoms were accompanied by at least 60% of the BTC supply being traded at a loss.

So far, the market has almost, but not quite, copied that trend, leading Woo to conclude that “max pain” may still be around the corner.

“This is one way of visualising maximum pain,” he wrote alongside one of his charts showing underwater supply.

“Past cycles bottomed when approx 60% of the coins traded below their purchase price. Will we hit this again? I don't know. The structure of this current market this time around is very different.”

According to on-chain analytics firm Glassnode, as of Oct. 2, 9.52 million BTC was being held at a loss. Last month, the metric in BTC terms hit its highest since March 2020.

Bitcoin supply in loss chart. Source: Glassnode

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Crypto sentiment index drops to October levels as Bitcoin dips under $92K

Bitcoin is trapped in a downtrend, but a ‘trifecta of positives’ scream ‘deep value’

In a recent Twitter Spaces, Capriole Fund founder Charles Edwards told Cointelegraph that BTC could go lower, but currently reflects “incredible deep value” based on multiple price metrics.

$20,000 is no longer support.

$100,000 didn’t happen.

The Bitcoin halving is 562 days away.

Bears simply refuse to release their vice grip on the market and the Federal Reserve’s policy of interest rate hikes and quantitative tightening is adding fuel to the fire.

Despite these challenges, in a Sept. 15 Twitter Space hosted by Cointelegraph, Capriole Fund founder Charles Edwards explained why he is still bullish on Bitcoin.

Edwards suggested that several on-chain metrics suggest that BTC is undervalued and he said:

“I see incredible deep value and I kind of call it a trifecta and that we have three positive things happening in my mind. One is cycle timing, where between years two and three, which historically has been where all of the Bitcoin cycles are bottomed. The second is that we've hit 90% of normal cycle down draws. Now, obviously, all of these things can go lower, but that alone is a bit of a good value signal. And then thirdly, just the readings across pretty much all on-chain metrics, whether it be Mayer Multiple, whether it be Puell Multiple, or NVT or dormancy, everything is at kind of one in four year level discounts. So for me, it's kind of that once a cycle opportunity that we see at the moment.”

When asked about his thoughts on the previous Bitcoin halving and how the current economic environment might impact the next halving, Edwards said:

“I think it was successful because it placed Bitcoin as one of the hardest assets in the world in the midst of massive monetary printing. And we did see a lot of the old school traditional finance, legendary investors, Druckenmiller, etc. kind of get into Bitcoin because of that as it's kind of a hedge more or less. And that kind of triggered the next 6 to 12 months of rallying. I also think that the crypto industry still does run on the Bitcoin halving cycle kind of time frame. For now. I don't think they will continue forever, but for now I do still think it holds weight and impact in how people invest in the space. With each subsequent halving the incremental value of the drop in inflation for bitcoin is negligible because it's already —barring Ethereum— now the hardest asset, or harder than gold.”

2022 has proved that risk management and building a balanced portfolio is still a skillset crypto investors are working to develop. Edwards said:

“Whatever your method is, however you are trading or investing, whether using stop losses or not as a strategy. You need to do some detailed modeling over as much data as you can and not just two years of data, because that's how entities have blown up in the past. Do as much as you can, like 10 years of Bitcoin at least, and assume the worst and then add again an element of buffer below that to manage your position sizing.”

Tune in and listen to the full episode here!

Disclaimer. Cointelegraph does not endorse any content of product on this page. While we aim at providing you all important information that we could obtain, readers should do their own research before taking any actions related to the company and carry full responsibility for their decisions, nor this article can be considered as an investment advice.

Crypto sentiment index drops to October levels as Bitcoin dips under $92K

The Fed, the Merge and $22K BTC — 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

A bullish weekly close sees Bitcoin tackle realized price while analysts speculate on major volatility in the coming days.

Bitcoin (BTC) starts a pivotal week on a firm footing as bulls succeed in wiping out weeks of losses.

After closing the latest weekly candle at $21,800, its highest since mid-August, BTC/USD is back on the radar as a long bet.

The end to an extended period of downside interspersed with sideways price action now appears firmly at an end, with volatility expected to form a major theme in the coming days.

In fact, few weeks in Bitcoin’s history have been as hectic as this one is likely to be.

In addition to the Ethereum (ETH) Merge on Sep. 15, the United States inflation trend will come under scrutiny on Sep. 13 with the release of August Consumer Price Index (CPI) data. The recipe for unpredictability is there.

How will Bitcoin weather the storm? While the macro picture looks muddy for risk assets as the U.S. dollar surges, on-chain data continues to point to a price bottom already in the making.

In addition, Bitcoin’s network fundamentals are poised to hit new all-time highs this week, underscoring miner resilience and recovery, along with conviction over profitability.

Cointelegraph takes a look at several of the main areas to watch as Bitcoin gives “Septembear” a run for its money.

Solid weekly close boosts short-term BTC bets

The latest weekly close provided some much-needed relief for Bitcoin bulls.

After weeks of miserable performance, BTC/USD finally managed to seal a convincing week’s gains, even avoiding a last-minute correction into the candle close, data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView shows.

BTC/USD 1-week candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingView

As such, at just above $21,800, the Sep. 11 event formed a solid foundation for a week due to deliver considerable volatility.

At the time of writing, that level is forming a consolidation zone, coinciding with an important trendline in the form of Bitcoin’s realized price. According to on-chain analytics firm Glassnode, this currently sits at approximately $21,770.

Bitcoin realized price chart. Source: Glassnode

BTC/USD has yet to tackle more significant bear market levels lost as support last month, chief among them the 200-week moving average, which is now near $23,330.

A spike to $22,350 on Bitstamp overnight nonetheless caught traders’ attention, furthering existing calls for upside to continue.

“This just was preliminary supply at 22300,” popular Twitter account Il Capo of Crypto wrote in one of several recent updates.

“Still thinking 23k is likely. Then we see reversal.”

A further tweet nonetheless cautioned that “major resistances” are now coming into play across Bitcoin and altcoins.

“In my opinion, we see a last leg up of 5-7% soon, then ltf distribution, then nuke. Get ready,” it stated.

In a sign of the coming volatility beginning, fellow trader Cheds noted that Bitcoin tagged its upper Bollinger Band on daily timeframes, the bands now slowly spreading to make way for a wider trading range.

BTC/USD 1-day candle chart with Bollinger Bands. Source: TradingView

Inbound CPI combines with dollar nosedive

One of the two main talking points for the week in BTC price action comes from a familiar source: the United States Federal Reserve.

CPI data is due for August, and hopes are resting on the decreasing inflation trend continuing after July’s print showed a peak having formed.

Should that be the case, it will be a boon for risk assets suffering heavily at the hands of a surging U.S. dollar.

According to CME Group’s FedWatch Tool, the Fed’s Federal Open Markets Committee is nonetheless likely to put in a repeat 75-basis-point interest rate hike at its September meeting next week.

Fed target rate probabilities chart. Source: CME Group

For dollar watchers, however, there is already reason to believe that the risk asset comeback should cement itself in the coming days.

The U.S. dollar index (DXY), fresh from twenty-year highs, has fallen nearly 2.7% in just four days.

“One thing which makes me doubt my downside bias for Bitcoin & Crypto in general post the ETH merge even, is DXY,” analyst Mark Cullen, creator of trading resource AlphaBTC, revealed.

“We see potential for 3 drives of [bear] divergence formed on the RSI & the Sept FOMC is next Wed. I wonder if we see $DXY break the parabola & push risk assets up.”

Phoenix Copper executive Donald Pond meanwhile called the USD and DXY chart “the most important out there.”

“The dollar is far too strong atm, and has been killing everything else,” he tweeted on the day.

“It's dropped quickly over last few days, but is still in a strong uptrend. No sustainable bounce for markets until trend breaks.”

U.S. dollar index (DXY) 1-day candle chart. Source: TradingView

The Merge is here!

Complementing the encouraging inflation data is a purely internal price trigger — the Ethereum Merge, due around Sep. 15.

The event, now set to become reality after months of uncertainty, sees Ethereum as a network transition from Proof-of-Work (PoW) to Proof-of-Stake (PoS) as its hashing algorithm.

Hype has been building on social media and beyond, and now, analysts are wondering what the immediate aftermath will be — specifically, whether investors will “sell the news” and bring markets lower immediately once the Merge completes.

In a dedicated update released on Sep. 10, trading platform Decentrader stressed the need for caution and avoidance of an “up-only” mindset.

“It is important to remember that there are multiple potential headwinds that could turn things in favour of the bears, namely bugs in the Merge code, a significant proportion of the Ethereum network moving to a fork taking market value with it, as well as Macro headwinds from the US August CPI data next week,” it wrote.

“It’s also important to remember that overall, there remains macro and geopolitical systematic risk which might halt the most bullish narrative for ETH. Lets see if price can hold, post merge.”

Decentrader drew comparisons to the hard forks of Bitcoin, which occurred in the second half of 2017 and later. Now, as then, the risk of distraction remains.

“Long term, the Merge has fundamental changes which we are interpreting as being bullish for Ethereum, but the actual event will undoubtedly prove to be volatile as the market wrestles between narratives,” the update concluded.

“Be extremely wary of scams, fork tokens etc, we have already seen multiple around the Merge and ETHPoW forks.”

ETH/USD trended down for a second straight day at the time of writing, eyeing $1,760 after hitting local highs of $1,790.

ETH/USD 1-hour candle chart (Binance). Source: TradingView

Difficulty, hash rate tackle all-time highs

Bitcoin’s network fundamentals have been anything but bearish lately, and this week, that trend continues to new heights.

Both Bitcoin’s mining difficulty and hash rate have either hit or are due to hit new all-time highs in the coming 48 hours as of Sep. 12.

According to estimates from monitoring resource BTC.com, difficulty will increase by 3% at the next automated readjustment, sending it further into unknown territory with a total of 31.91 trillion.

That follows the previous jumbo readjustment of 9.26% two weeks ago, this forming the largest increase since 2021 as well as acting as a firm signal that miner competition is healthier than ever.

Bitcoin network fundamentals overview (screenshot). Source: BTC.com

Indeed, since their latest “capitulation” phase ended last month, as per on-chain data, miners have been racing to add hashing power to their operations. This is exemplified by hash rate — the estimated combined hashing power of the Bitcoin network — itself spiking to levels never seen before in recent days.

According to MiningPoolStats, that spike came on Sep. 5 and involved a brief trip to 298 exahashes per second (EH/s). Hash rate currently hovers at just under 250 EH/s.

Reacting, analytics platform TheTIE meanwhile noted that the increase in hash rate had moved the timing for the next Bitcoin block subsidy halving event forward.

“As Bitcoin Hashrate rises up to all time highs, there's an important second order effect to remember: The Halving. Before this, it was expected for 2024, but now the projected date for the next $BTC halving has been moved to Q4'23,” it commented alongside a hash rate chart.

Extreme fear proves sticky

As bullish as the data and analysis seems to be, the overall crypto market still can’t quite shake the sense of foreboding.

Related: Crypto traders eye ATOM, APE, CHZ and QNT as Bitcoin flashes bottom signs

The Crypto Fear & Greed Index, after a brief escape higher, is back in “extreme fear” as of Sep. 12 in a sign that a definitive change of trend has yet to enter.

Crypto Fear & Greed Index (screenshot). Source: Alternative.me

“Extreme fear” is where the Index has spent much of 2022, including its longest-ever consecutive stint lasting over two months.

For Santiment, a platform dedicated to analysis of crypto sentiment, there was reason to be cautious thanks to the profit-taking activity on both Bitcoin and Ethereum.

“Bitcoin has climbed back above $22k today for the first time in over 3 weeks,” it summarized.

“$BTC's ratio of transactions in profit vs. loss is at its highest since March, and it appears that many have viewed this mild bounce as the trigger to trade again.”
Crypto profit-taking annotated chart. Source: Santiment/ Twitter

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Crypto sentiment index drops to October levels as Bitcoin dips under $92K

Bitcoin mining has never been more competitive even as BTC loses 13% in August

Bitcoin difficulty completes its largest single upward readjustment since January, with average hash rate eyeing new all-time highs of its own.

Data from on-chain monitoring resource BTC.com confirms that on Aug. 31, Bitcoin’s network difficulty hit new all-time highs.

Bitcoin seals biggest difficulty jum since start of 2022

Despite the recent BTC price drawdowns, Bitcoin’s network fundamentals are telling an optimistic tale as August comes to a close.

Both difficulty and hash rate are climbing, reflecting conviction among miners over long-term profitability of their network participation. It also suggests that the mining sector is absorbing lower profits versus costs in the short term.

Difficulty, which added 9.26% at its Aug. 31 automated readjustment, now stands at its highest ever. Competition among miners is as healthy as ever.

For comparison, the last time that difficulty increased more at once was in January (9.32%), and before that, in August 2021 (13.24%).

According to BTC.com, hash rate now stands at an average 221 exahashes per second (EH/s), a hair off its highest-ever recorded average reading of 223 EH/s from just before May’s Terra LUNA implosion.

Bitcoin (BTC) fundamentals have delivered a “welcome uptick” which research says takes the edge off a classic bear market.

“Personally, I think as more hashrate comes from the US, we'll see a new annual seasonal trend like we used to see in China. ie hot months lower hashrate/helping to stabilize grid, cool months higher hashrate,” macro analyst Jason Deane wrote in part of a Twitter response to the difficulty readjustment.

Bitcoin network fundamentals overview (screenshot). Source: BTC.com

Bitcoin "barely hanging on"

The numbers provide a welcome counterpoint to troubled spot markets and gloomy projections for the rest of 2022.

Related: BTC price top warnings emerge as 10K BTC leaves wallet after 9 years

With BTC/USD set to end August down almost 13%, on-chain analytics firm Glassnode said that a rebound in fundamentals would be a helpful antidote to an otherwise sour environment.

“It remains plausible that Bitcoin is in a bottom formation range and would be historically similar to all past bear markets,” it concluded in the latest edition of its regular newsletter, “The Week On-Chain,” released on Aug. 30 and titled "Bitcoin Barely Hanging On."

“However, Bitcoin prices are just barely hanging on, and any uptick in the fundamentals would be a welcome change.”

BTC/USD circled $20,150 at the time of writing, having recovered from sub-$20,000 levels overnight, as per data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView.

BTC/USD 1-hour candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingView

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Crypto sentiment index drops to October levels as Bitcoin dips under $92K

Bitcoin mining difficulty set for 8-month record gains despite BTC price dip

Bitcoin network fundamentals seem not to care about spot price weakness, with both difficulty and hash rate making an impressive recovery.

Bitcoin (BTC) may have hit six-week lows of under $20,000 but its network fundamentals are anything but bearish.

The latest on-chain data shows that, far from capitulating, hash rate and difficulty are making snap gains.

Data supports "doozy" difficulty jump

Despite being down around 7% in a week, BTC/USD is not putting off miners, who have recently exited their own multi-month capitulation phase.

Now, with hardware and competition returning to the network, fundamental indicators are firmly in "up only" mode as August draws to a close.

This is neatly captured by difficulty — an expression of, among other things, the scale of competition among miners for block subsidies — which is due to increase by an estimated 6.8% next week.

According to data from on-chain monitoring resource BTC.com, this will be the highest upward difficulty adjustment since January this year.

Not only that, but should the 6.8% increase materialize, difficulty will jump to new all-time highs.

"We may see a difficulty jump doozy enough to set a new (or close to new) ATH in a few days," Bitcoin mining consultancy firm Blocksbridge forecast in the latest edition of its regular newsletter, "Miner Weekly," released on Aug. 27.

Blocksbridge nonetheless noted that the current climate was not easy for all network participants. Those with older equipment, for example, were feeling the squeeze thanks to spot price losses and equivalent drop in value of block subsidies and fees versus costs such as electricity.

"Long story short is that the bear market is really crashing those with inefficient mining fleets," it continued.

Bitcoin mining overview (screenshot). Source: BTC.com

Hash rate rebounds to target all-time high

Back to more bullish numbers and Bitcoin's hash rate looks to be copying difficulty in a fresh push for new record highs.

Related: Still growing — Armenian mining operator increases power plant capacity

According to estimated data from monitoring site MiningPoolStats, hash rate stood at up to 246 exahashes per second (EH/s) as of Aug. 22, inches from all-time highs of 251 EH/s measured in late April.

Hash rate is always an estimate, and its value fluctuations do not imply direct increases or decreases in miner activity.

Bitcoin estimated hash rate chart (screenshot). Source: MiningPoolStats

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Crypto sentiment index drops to October levels as Bitcoin dips under $92K

Canaan exec says opportunity outweighs crisis as Bitcoin miners struggle with shrinking profits

This bear market is proving to be especially tough for Bitcoin miners, but Canaan senior vice president Edward Lu says the industry is “evolving toward a positive long term.”

2022 has been an exceptionally rough year for the crypto market, and the last few months of Bitcoin’s (BTC) price action could be a sign that bears aren’t even close to being ready to let up. Crumbling crypto prices also equate to diminishing profits for Bitcoin miners and this week’s regulatory action by the United States lawmakers requesting energy consumption data from four major BTC mining companies is bound to exert a bit more pressure on an already fragile situation.

Despite the increasingly bearish climate, most of the Bitcoin miners Cointelegraph has spoken to are incredibly optimistic about Bitcoin’s short and long-term price prospects.

Chiming in with similar sentiments, Canaan senior vice president Edward Lu spoke with Cointelegraph head of markets Ray Salmond about how industrial Bitcoin miners have matured and the new synergies they have created with the oil and gas and big energy sector in the United States and the Middle East.

Ray Salmond: Edward, what’s happening in the mining industry right now, from your point of view?

Edward Lu: Wow. This is a really big question. A lot of things are happening in this industry, especially in recent months. If you’re looking at Bitcoin dropping a little bit and coming back to stabilize in terms of days, it looks like the cycle is shorter than what we expect. I think by the end of the year, the price will be a bit better, going up a little bit. In the mining industry, you can see a lot of activities happening.

I remember that before last year, China and the U.S. market were the two major markets for mining, a mining’s generating hash rates, and then the Chinese miners moved out of the country to Kazakhstan in the first phase. And then starting from the beginning of this year, we see a lot of movements toward the U.S. market, and obviously, we see a lot of activities happening where you are in the state of Texas.

The availability of cheaper electricity, comparatively speaking, and also friendly policies and as well as engineers. There are decent, well-trained engineers in those industries. So really, a lot of things are happening in the mining industries.

RS: Electricity prices are soaring in the European Union and the United States, and at the same time, Bitcoin continues to trade near its 2018 all-time high. ASIC prices are also down roughly 70%, and it appears that for some miners, the cost of mining outweighs profitability. What are some of the capital expenditures (CAPEX) and operational expenses (OPEX) considerations that industrial miners have in this current climate?

EL: Well, yes. But if you look in the long term, the mining industry is a healthy and profitable business. Even if you look at these days in the short interim, sure, there is a small drop. The Bitcoin price and the energy price are increasing. But again, if you’re looking at CAPEX, OPEX or the profitability of the mining industry, there are many things combined together.

Of course, number one is your machine cost. Number two is your energy cost. Number three is your infrastructure cost. Number four is your OPEX for daily maintenance. But to the best of my knowledge, if you’re looking at today’s machine efficiency and today’s market, the average price of energy, and the average price of your OPEX, then Bitcoin price needs to not drop below $15,000 for miners to continue making a profit.

RS: The next Bitcoin halving is in about 590 days. What impact does this have on the efficiency of ASICs in the range of 110 TH/s to 140 TH/s? Can you speak about the reward for mining becoming smaller, yet the energy required to produce 1 BTC being higher? How could this dynamic change as production costs rise?

EL: The machines will keep improving. We’ll be more efficient when the technology develops. Of course, Bitcoin has been designed in a way that every four years, that reward is halved so that it becomes less and less — but it doesn’t mean that your profit will become less and less. If you look at the history, each halving happened every four years, and the business is still growing healthily. Mining industries keep growing. The profit depends, as I said earlier, on a lot of things. Of course, your machine costs, your infrastructure cost, your OPEX, CAPEX and also your energy costs. And of course, the last thing — which is pretty important — is the Bitcoin price. So, there are many things together. I don’t see this trend becoming smaller and smaller. I think this industry will still keep on going as well as we have gone through in the past. It’s a healthy, profitable business for mining industries.

RS: Is it incorrect to assume that with each having, ASICs must become more powerful and therefore use more power?

EL: No. It’s not right, to be honest. If you look at the machines and technology, even if it is going to have 100 TH/s, 120 TH/s or 140 TH/s, the consumption power versus the terahash — which is the efficiency we call per joule per TH/s — is becoming less and less.

If you’re looking at the history of previous machines, the efficiency is over 60 or 65 joules, and now it goes down today. If you look at the market, the average efficiency is about 30 joules. Then we see by the end of this year, every company, the three key players, are going to have machines or are already going to market that they have 25 joules and even below this figure. So, the machines are more efficient, and they consume less power versus TH/s.

RS: There’s growing synergy between traditional big energy and Bitcoin mining, such as capturing flared gas to power generators, solar mining and even hydroelectric-powered mining. Will industrial Bitcoin mining be the linchpin that actually catalyzes mass adoption of Bitcoin and brings it into everyone’s daily life?

EL: I started in this industry a few years ago, and when we started this industry, it was a lot of Chinese entrepreneurs who were mining. They were all individual entrepreneurs with passion who believed in this industry. I emphasize that an individual or passionate entrepreneur in China started that, and they looked for short-term interest. They looked for short-term money — you know, your typical Chinese individual entrepreneur.

But slowly, when I look at my partners, my Canaan partners, the profiles have been changing, or let’s say evolving, over the last three years. From the individual Chinese entrepreneur to now, more and more, I see that our long-term partners of Canaan and Avalon are traditional energy companies, institutional investors, financial-institutional clients and traditional financial investors. This kind of change or evolution really changed the picture of the mining industry and the nature of the mining industry.

As you mentioned, those energy companies step in because of the ability to use wasted energy and surplus daytime and nighttime energy. And this helps them to use these wasted energies and convert them into a storable value. For me, Bitcoin is a value that you can store. When you are wasting those energies, they cannot be stored in a storable way.

So, this is the perspective of the energy company. And of course, this kind of evolution and increased involvement — plus the change of the players in the mining industries — I think evolved the whole industry.

It becomes industrially scaled, and it becomes more professional throughout the mining business. It also will help with the long-term outlook of this business. People are more and more from institutional, traditional and energy companies — they work for the long term. So for me, this changes the picture. This gives us more professionalism, transparency and long-term goals in the mining industry.

Related: Will the Bitcoin mining industry collapse? Analysts explain why crisis is really opportunity

RS: I personally think that Bitcoin is a legitimate asset. There are always a number of investment theses that explain why a person should have exposure to Bitcoin. You’ve said Bitcoin has gone from a grassroots or a community-led entrepreneurial hobby for making short-term gains to an industrialized arm of the energy sector. Do you think that this legitimization by the energy sector will lead to the mass adoption of Bitcoin as an asset from an investment point of view?

EL: We are strong believers in Bitcoin, of course. We’ve been in this industry for a long time, and Canaan is one of the earliest companies. In fact, our CEO is the inventor of the ASIC miner machines. Of course we are strong believers. Like you said, you believe that it is an asset. It is, for me, an asset. Again, if you’re looking at what I say, the profile of the mining industry and its entrepreneurs is changing. But if you’re looking at Bitcoin itself — when we started this industry, it was more or less that the Bitcoin was in the hands of those individual entrepreneurs. And since the past three years, as I mentioned, the traditional financial institutions and companies have been in this industry. So, that really changes Bitcoin, the ownership and the profile of the ownership.

That’s why in recent years, Bitcoin is more and more correlated with traditional financial market fluctuations. The volatility of Bitcoin is more or less coherent with the current traditional market versus the previous one. So, this is really a change for me for the positive, that Bitcoin is one of the traditional financial assets. It is an asset and is becoming more and more traditional now — that’s what I mean.

RS: Many long-term investors, retail investors and small miners who used to mine at home as a hobby or for profit fear that the industrialization of mining and Wall Street’s move into cryptocurrencies is going to damage what Bitcoin stands for and dilute the movement. Do you believe the Bitcoin revolution is being co-opted?

EL: Yes, well, you’re right. I mean, first of all, we believe in Bitcoin. We believe in decentralization as well. Since we haven’t discussed in detail the technologies, when I mentioned our Canaan Avalon, when we produce our machines, the normal air cooling system consumes power less than 3,500 watts.

We are not like the other companies that develop containers for order. The big companies produce machines that consume over 6,500 watts. These companies are developing machines that are not for retail miners. We are sticking to the start of the culture, and decentralization is at its core. If you’re looking at our machines, we are focusing on individual machines. Each machine must consume less than 3,500 watts, which means that every individual at home can mine in their house, garage or in their kitchen. You buy one or 10. That depends on your cost of electricity and such, but the machine is decentralized. You don’t necessarily have to be mining with big companies assembling in a huge mining site or under a huge infrastructure of containers.

RS: Is there anything that you want to say to the world? Do you have any personal thoughts you'd like to share?

EL: I think anybody in this industry knows that Bitcoin has a cycle, right? Sometimes the cycle lasts two to three years, sometimes three to six months, or sometimes longer. This time, I believe it will be shorter. Of course, nobody can predict it, but I have more confidence that by the end of the year, the price will be going up slowly. And in the long term, I strongly believe that Bitcoin will have much better growth in terms of price.

This is one thing that I want to tell the industry: Let’s be confident in this industry because this industry has really evolved in terms of mining machine technologies, in terms of infrastructure build-ups, by using green energies, and in terms of a good ratio mix of individual and institutional players. And again, in terms of Bitcoin being ownership, as I mentioned, even you believe it’s a sort of financial asset now.

So, everything for me is growing or evolving toward positive long-term things. I do have strong confidence, and I do want to convey this kind of confidence to people and to the readers of Cointelegraph.

I’m Chinese, and in my language, the Chinese character for crisis is two characters composed in one word, “crisis.” But in fact, you can separate the two characters. One is crisis, and the other is opportunity. In Chinese, we say 危机 (pronounced wei ji). This moment is the moment of 危机 (wei ji). The first character (危) means danger, or crisis, and the second character (机) means opportunity. The Chinese always see crisis in two parts. One is, of course, a crisis, and you have to be alert. You have to be serious. You have to prepare yourself to anticipate this crisis. But we believe in more opportunities during the crisis. There are a lot of opportunities. So, the Chinese word “危机” is always crisis and opportunity.

I do believe this moment is more opportunity than crisis — more opportunities for miners, miner manufacturers, infrastructure builders, energy builders and even traditional financial investors. For me, I look at this time as a time for more opportunities.

This interview has been condensed and edited for greater clarity.

Crypto sentiment index drops to October levels as Bitcoin dips under $92K

BTC to lose $21K despite miners’ capitulation exit? 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

Miners are a glimmer of hope in a barren Bitcoin landscape this week ahead of a key Federal Reserve event in Jackson Hole.

Bitcoin (BTC) starts a new week fresh from a new multi-week low amid a return of highly nervous sentiment.

After dipping below $21,000 over the weekend, the largest cryptocurrency is consolidating around 10% lower than a week ago, and the fear across crypto markets is clearly visible.

As some call for new lows and others warns of a difficult few months ahead, there is plenty for bulls to contend with on both long and short timeframes

The United States Federal Reserve’s annual Jackson Hole symposium is due this week, while September is already due to form something of a showdown when it comes to inflation and associated macro price triggers.

That could mean fresh volatility across risk assets both during and prior, something weary investors will no doubt not welcome after last week's escapades on BTC/USD.

Related: 3 reasons why the Bitcoin price bottom is not in

At the same time, miners are giving strong signals that the worst is over, with the hash rate starting to rebound from a rare “capitulation” phase. 

With that in mind, Cointelegraph takes a closer look at five market-moving topics pertinent to Bitcoin traders in the coming days and beyond.

All eyes on Jackson Hole

The United States Federal Reserve is once again in the driving seat this week when it comes to potential macro price triggers for risk assets.

Fresh from last week’s Federal Open Markets Committee (FOMC) meeting, Fed officials, together with banking figures from around the world, will meet for the annual Jackson Hole symposium on Aug. 25-27.

This year’s gathering comes at a critical time for markets in the U.S. and further afield. Inflation under the Fed’s jurisdiction appears to have begun cooling, while elsewhere, the opposite story remains true.

The latest U.S. inflation data is still weeks away, but that might not stop Fed Chair Jerome Powell from giving strong hints as to how the Fed will react, as well as positioning expectations regarding future economic policy.

With that in mind, volatility could easily pick up both before and during the event, making Jackson Hole a key item to watch on traders’ radar.

“They are so focused on doing this partly just because they screwed up last year with the whole ‘transitory’ thing, and they realize that the one thing they can do now is tighten policy, and that will slow inflation,” Kevin Cummins, chief U.S. economist at NatWest Markets in Stamford, Connecticut, told Bloomberg.

With that, it remains to be seen whether the market will shift to favor another 75-basis-point funds rate hike in September or gravitate toward a lower 50-point raise.

In a preview of its Jackson Hole comments circulating online, Bank of America said that it would “continue to look for 50bp rate hikes in September and November, plus an additional 25bp rate hike in December.”

Rate hikes in themselves present headwinds for risk assets and, in turn, provide a challenge for Bitcoin and its bid to escape strong correlation to asset classes such as U.S. equities.

Fed funds rate chart (screenshot). Source: Federal Reserve

BTC in for “ugly” six months

Bitcoin managed to stave off major volatility over the weekend, but still saw a new low for August as low-volume weekend trading conditions accentuated market moves.

After the sudden drawdown on Aug. 19, BTC/USD spent subsequent days eking out a low in an overall consolidation pattern, this continuing at the time of writing.

The low came in the form of a trip to $20,770 on Bitstamp, with Bitcoin then adding $1,000 before returning to trade approximately in the middle of the two values.

The weekly close at $21,500 was troublesome, marking the lowest since the week of July 18 after last week’s candle cost bulls almost $3,000 or 11.6%.

With fear of a new low palpable among commentators, others argued that conditions were not unequivocally pointing to further misery.

For Cointelegraph contributor Michaël van de Poppe, BTC/USD may cap any dip at the CME futures close from Aug. 19, this lying at around $21,200. More difficult for the majority of the market, he implied, would be gains, given the overall bias for downside to enter.

“Probably around CME open, we'll be seeing markets drop to $21.2K as that's the close of Friday, and then everything is fine,” he told Twitter followers over the weekend:

“Still not inclined we'll be seeing new lows. The overall period of accumulation and heavy correction on Friday causes panic. Pain is on the upside.”
BTC/USD 1-hour candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingView

Zooming out, however, Brian Beamish, founder of education suite The Rational Trader, left social media with no illusions over how the rest of 2022 should shape up for Bitcoin.

“Next 12-19 wks are gonna be ugly,” part of a tweet read.

“Once done, the floor for this cycle ought to be in - then we shall start it all over again.”

Beamish drew on experience of two prior crypto bear markets, with a comparative price action chart suggesting that the real macro low was far from in for BTC/USD.

Equally confident in a recovery over a longer period, however, was analyst Matthew Hyland, who argued that traders should not lose faith.

“The Bitcoin structure over the coming weeks/months shouldn't scare you. Either a higher low, double bottom, or cycle low will be formed,” he summarized.

“The end is near.”
BTC/USD 1-week candle chart (Bitstamp). Source: TradingView

Hash ribbons show miners out of capitulation phase

One group of Bitcoin network participants for which an end to hard times seems demonstrably near is miners.

Despite the latest price drop, on-chain data now shows that Bitcoin miners en masse have exited a “capitulation” period lasting over two months.

According to the hash ribbons metric, which uses two moving averages of hash rate to determine miner participation trends, a rebound is now taking shape.

The move has been long anticipated. Earlier in August, mining firm Blockware forecast the hash ribbons capitulation phase to end either this month or next.

The latest shift was noted by Charles Edwards, CEO of asset manager Capriole, who compared this year’s capitulation with others in Bitcoin’s history.

“The Bitcoin miner capitulation has officially ended today, making it the 3rd longest capitulation in history at 71 days,” he wrote in a Twitter thread:

“This capitulation zone was longer than 2021, and just two days shorter than 2018's where price touched $3.1K.”

A look at hash rate estimates from monitoring resource MiningPoolStats shows that an uptick above 200 exahashes per second (EH/s) likely began in recent days.

“Historically, Bitcoin’s miner capitulations have captured major price lows and been great buy-signals,” Edwards continued, echoing the classic Bitcoin market mantra, “price follows hash rate:”

“Miner capitulations that occur late cycle (at least 2 years after halving) and after cycle tops have been the most profitable long-term signals (eg. 2012, 2015, 2018).”
Bitcoin hash ribbons chart. Source: LookIntoBitcoin

Exchange balances hit new 4-year lows

Price struggles on short timeframes have proven to be something of a non-issue for buyers this time around.

Behind the scenes, investors, instead of fleeing BTC exposure, have been piling into the market at a noticeable pace in recent days.

According to data from on-chain analytics platform CryptoQuant, from Aug. 18, available Bitcoin on 21 major exchanges dropped from 2,342,662 BTC to 2,309,727 BTC on Aug. 22.

In four days, exchange users thus removed over 30,000 BTC from their accounts.

Bitcoin exchange reserve chart. Source: CryptoQuant

Fellow data firm Glassnode, meanwhile, added that the current combined balance across the exchanges it monitors hit a fresh four-year low on Aug. 22.

For comparison, in August 2018, BTC/USD was climbing toward $7,000, but still several months out from its bear market bottom of $3,100.

Bitcoin exchange balance chart. Source: Glassnode/ Twitter

Sentiment gauge drops 40% in a week

Compared to before the price drop, meanwhile, sentiment is not what it was on crypto.

Related: Here’s 5 cryptocurrencies with bullish setups that are on the verge of a breakout

Even as exchanges see an acceleration in BTC leaving their books, the overall picture is now firmly one of “fear” when it comes to Bitcoin and altcoin investors.

According to the Crypto Fear & Greed Index, which uses a basket of factors to give a normalized score for market sentiment, “extreme fear” is just a step away.

At 29/100, the Index is four points off a return to its extreme fear bracket, having hit 27/100 over the weekend.

The latter represents a drop of 40% in a single week — seven days prior, the Index was at 45/100, recording its most optimistic levels since April.

Crypto Fear & Greed Index (screenshot). Source: Alternative.me

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Crypto sentiment index drops to October levels as Bitcoin dips under $92K

SBI lost 40% of hash rate after stopping mining in Russia: Data

After terminating mining operations in Russia's mining-rich region of Siberia in February, SBI still continues running some mining activity in the country.

Japanese financial giant SBI Holdings has partly terminated cryptocurrency mining in Russia due to geopolitical uncertainty and the crypto winter.

SBI Holdings suspended mining operations in Russia’s crypto mining-rich region of Siberia, citing reasons like Russia-Ukraine conflict and the ongoing bear market, Bloomberg reported on Thursday.

The Japanese online brokerage shut down the Siberian mining operations shortly after Russia started a military intervention in Ukraine on Feb. 24, a spokesperson for the firm reportedly said.

The termination contributed to SBI’s crypto asset business reporting a pretax loss of 9.7 billion yen ($71 million) in Q2 202. As a result, the Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group-backed group recorded a 2.4 billion yen ($17.5 million) in net losses, reportedly posting its first quarterly loss in a decade.

The reports on SBI’s mining suspensions in Siberia correspond with the public mining information of SBI’s crypto mining subsidiary SBI Crypto. According to data from the blockchain explorer BTC.com, SBI Crypto’s mining hash rate plummeted about 40% from 5,600 petahashes per second (PH/S) in mid-February to 3,300 PH/S on Aug. 18, 2022.

SBI Crypto’s six-month mining hash rate. Source: BTC.com

After closing some Siberian mining operations, SBI is reportedly still running some mining activity in Russia, according to Bloomberg. SBI’s chief financial officer Hideyuki Katsuchi reportedly disclosed the company’s plan to sell crypto mining hardware and withdraw from the country completely earlier this week.

SBI has yet to decide when it will complete the withdrawal from Siberia, a spokesperson at SBI reportedly said. The company has no other crypto business in Russia, and plans to keep operating its Moscow-based commercial banking unit, SBI Bank.

Related: Russia seems to be preparing to mine Bitcoin with flare gas

As previously reported, Russia emerged as one of the world’s biggest crypto mining countries last year, becoming the third largest BTC hash rate producer after the United States and Kazakhstan. The country quickly lost its hash rate leadership as China returned to the top three mining nations in early 2022, while many miners opted to avoid operations in Russia due to geopolitical uncertainty.

In April 2022, the U.S. Treasury Department imposed sanctions on BitRiver, Russia’s largest crypto data center provider involved in major imports of crypto mining devices from other countries. Some U.S. mining companies like Compass Mining subsequently sought to liquidate $30 million in crypto mining hardware in Siberia to avoid sanctions.

Crypto sentiment index drops to October levels as Bitcoin dips under $92K

Australia-based crypto miner doubles hash rate after energizing Canadian rigs

Daniel Roberts, Iris Energy co-founder, said the firm had energized the facility on time “despite the current market backdrop and ongoing international supply chain challenges.”

Australian Bitcoin miner Iris Energy said it had increased its hash rate to more than 2.3 exahashes per second following the completion of phase two of its operations in Mackenzie, Canada.

In a Monday announcement, Iris Energy said it had brought 41 megawatts of operating capacity in the British Columbia municipality online roughly two months ahead of schedule, adding 1.5 EH/s to its existing hash rate. In addition, the Bitcoin (BTC) miner expects to bring another 50 MW online in Prince George by the end of the third quarter of 2022, increasing its operating capacity to 3.7 EH/s.

Iris Energy co-founder and co-CEO Daniel Roberts said the firm had energized the facility on schedule “despite the current market backdrop and ongoing international supply chain challenges.” The firm planned to deploy additional miners in August to increase its total hash rate to 6 EH/s.

The mining firm secured $19.5 million in equity funding and $3.9 million in debt during a pre-IPO funding round in December 2020, and shares started trading on the Nasdaq in November 2021. At the time of publication, the price of shares was $5.30, having risen by roughly 12% in the last 24 hours.

Related: Controlling 17% of BTC hash rate: Report on publicly listed mining firms

Iris said it invested in data centers powered by renewable energy amid controversy around the environmental impact of crypto miners. Though many proponents have pointed to examples including crypto miners using the power produced by natural gas that would otherwise be burned, some policymakers in the United States have called mining “problematic” for energy use and emissions.

Crypto sentiment index drops to October levels as Bitcoin dips under $92K