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Bitcoin fees top Ethereum for 3 days in a row as halving approaches

Transaction fees will play an important role in keeping Bitcoin miners afloat after the halving as the subsidy for mining a block is set to fall from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC.

Fees on Bitcoin have surpassed Ethereum for three consecutive days as miners and traders prepare for the upcoming Bitcoin halving, and, to a lesser extent, the introduction of Runes on Bitcoin.

Bitcoin miners have cashed in $7.47 million in fees on April 17 — about $160,000 more than the $7.31 million paid to Ethereum stakers, according to Crypto Fees.

Bitcoin miners also raked in $9.98 million and $5.91 million across April 15 and 16 — beating out Ethereum stakers by $3.5 million and 1.1 million on those respective days.

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No concerns over Bitcoin halving supply shock, says Bitvavo CEO

The CEO of Dutch cryptocurrency exchange Bitvavo believes market dynamics will cater for the potential skyrocketing demand for Bitcoin in 2024.

Supply and demand dynamics could mitigate concerns of a potential Bitcoin market supply shock during the upcoming mining reward halving in 2024, according to Bitvavo CEO Mark Nuvelstijn.

The co-founder of the Netherlands-based cryptocurrency exchange weighed in on Bitcoin-related market movements in conversation with Cointelegraph during the European Blockchain Convention held in Barcelona.

Related: There are now nearly 40M Bitcoin addresses in profit — A new record

Nuvelstijn expressed his belief that exchanges would likely have sufficient Bitcoin supply to meet the demand from users:

“If there’s more demand the price will increase, and it will keep increasing until there’s a match between price and demand.”

The Bitvavo CEO added that the potential booming demand for Bitcoin would lead to increasing prices until demand cools and prices stabilize. As a result, Nuvelstijn is not concerned that exchanges like his would run out of BTC to meet trading demands:

“As a platform we’re agnostic to that. We are just matching buy and sell orders to make trades possible. If there’s a lot of demand for Bitcoin, it’s only a good thing for the sector.”

Nuvelstijn also weighed in on the influence of Bitcoin exchange-traded fund applications submitted in the United States over the past year and the potential influence their approval could have on the value of Bitcoin:

“We’ve seen more attention, more interest in the crypto market. You saw how steeply the Bitcoin price increased over the past two weeks. It was up 20 or 30 percent which is a massive jump.”

Bitvavo has seen an increase in web traffic as well as customers visiting their platform and using their app. The exchange has onboarded new customers as well, while Nuvelstijn added that these numbers were still short of the levels it saw in 2021:

“As you mentioned, the ETFs are not yet approved, right? So this is let's say a pre-event. The event itself still needs to happen.”

Nuvelstijn also explained that while Bitvavo’s core markets remain the Netherland and Belgium, it is eyeing steady expansion into jurisdictions including France, Spain and Italy. He also believes that the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) will drive market maturity and ease of doing business:

“It will open up the European market so you no longer need a license per country. The regulation will become more harmonized, meaning you can easily do cross-border business.”

Nuvelstijn also sees MiCA laying the foundation for cryptocurrency companies to offer more financial services, drawing comparisons to conventional financial regulations:

“It will be easier for crypto companies to offer financial services and for financial services to offer crypto services. I think you will see those kinds of business models being more commingled.”

A report from a Standard Chartered analyst in July 2023 suggests that growing institutional demand for Bitcoin could drive the price of BTC to around $120,000 by the end of the year, driven by increased mining profitability which will ease the need to sell mined coins.

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Bitcoin miners raked up $184M in fees in Q2, surpassing all of 2022

It's been one of the most lucrative quarters for those that profit from Bitcoin transaction fees in nearly two years.

Bitcoin (BTC) miners made a lofty $184 million from transaction fees in the second quarter, far more than what they pocketed over the entire 2022 — as Bitcoin’s price surged and BRC-20 tokens flourished.

The $184 million payout is more than a 270% increase from the first quarter of 2023 and it is the first quarter to have surpassed the $100 million mark since Q2 2021, according to a July 5 report from cryptocurrency analytics platform Coin Metrics.

Bitcoin miners earned more from fees in Q2 than the previous five quarters combined. Source: Coin Metrics

Bitcoin miners receive transaction fees whenevea new block has been validated, the amount of which is determined by the data volume and the user demand for block space.

Coin Metrics said the jump in fees was due to Bitcoin’s recent price surge bolstered ‘top-line revenues” and the advent of BRC-20, a new token standard on Bitcoin introduced in March which uses Ordinals inscriptions to mint and transfer fungible tokens on the network, adding:

“The token standard does unlock experimental new use cases for Bitcoin’s core transaction types, and accelerates the push to scale Bitcoin with the Lightning Network.

However, it is worth noting that transaction fees represented only 7.7% of the total $2.4 billion made by miners over the quarter.

The remainder came in the form of Bitcoin block rewards, with miners currently being rewarded 6.25 BTC for solving each block. This is set to fall to 3.125 BTC after the network’s next halving cycle, expected to take place in May.

Related: Bitcoin miners send record $128M in revenue to exchanges

Bitcoin miners also had other reasons to celebrate in the second quarter, according to the firm.

In May, the Bitcoin mining industry “notched a win” with the Biden Administration’s proposed Digital Asset Mining Energy (DAME) tax being blocked.

Bitcoin miners also enjoyed easier macroeconomics conditions in the quarter too, with “receding inflation pressures” translating to lower electricity prices for United States-based miners, Coin Metrics noted.

However, with Bitcoin’s hashrate continuing to reach new all-time highs over the last 12 months, competition in the mining fee market is also tightening, Coin Metrics explained:

“Competition remains as fierce as ever, with Bitcoin’s hashrate breaking new highs during the quarter at 375 EH/s [...] We see that the overall network’s efficiency continues to increase with the adoption of modern ASICs such as the S19 XP.”

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Litecoin price poised for 700% gains vs. Bitcoin, says Charlie Lee

The Litecoin halving is just three months away and LTC price is well-positioned for some massive gains, argues the founder.

Litecoin (LTC) can make some big gains versus Bitcoin (BTC), particularly as the August halving event gets closer, according to Litecoin's creator Charlie Lee.

Litecoin up 85% since record lows versus Bitcoin

Lee argues that LTC/BTC could rally to 0.025 BTC, or over 700%, in the next bull cycle, with Litecoin having "higher throughput by design, scalability with extension blocks, better fungibility, and privacy from MWEB."

Lee:

"I can see an upside target of 10% (0.025 LTC/BTC). In the next bull market, 5% (0.0125) shouldn't be too hard to achieve. I honestly don't see it going much below 1% (0.0025) on the downside. The next halving will be in ~92 days. This is going to be fun."

His statements appeared after Litecoin's 85% price recovery from its record low of 0.001716 BTC in June 2022. LTC is still down about 90% below its record high of 0.051 BTC from November 2013, owing to rising competition in the altcoin market.

LTC/BTC daily price chart. Source: TradingView

Litecoin halving looms

LTC's recovery in recent months has been accompanied by growing buzz around its upcoming block reward halving.

The Litecoin block reward to miners will be cut by 50% from 12.5 LTC to 6.25 LTC sometime in August 2023.

As a result, new LTC supply will drop by 50%, which should, at least in theory, make LTC more scarce on the market and therefore, go up in price.

Historically, the months leading to Litecoin halving typically prompted traders to accumulate LTC. For instance, the first halving event in August 2015 preceded a 450% price rally versus Bitcoin.

However, the months before the second halving event saw limited gains as Bitcoin's crypto dominance grew amid the U.S.-China trade war. But, as a rule, LTC/BTC falls sharply after halving events, suggesting the same could happen after August 2023.

LTC price technicals hint at a similar scenario, with LTC/BTC printing what appears to be a bear flag pattern, as shown below.

LTC/BTC three-day price chart. Source: TradingView

The pair may bounce toward the upper trendline of its bear flag, which coincided with the 50-3D exponential moving average (50-3D EMA; the red wave) near 0.0035 BTC ahead of the halving. But its bear flag target sits around 0.0024 BTC, down 20% from current price levels.

Litecoin price to $100 by June?

Litecoin has fared better versus the U.S. dollar in the months leading up to the last two halvings. LTC's price grew about 250% ahead of the first halving and 500% ahead of the second when measured from their sessional lows, respectively. 

LTC/USD monthly price chart. Source: TradingView

The price has undergone a similar upside trajectory ahead of the August halving, with LTC up 120% from its sessional low of around $40. And it may continue to rise in the coming months, based on a mix of technical and on-chain indicators.

For instance, Litecoin is undervalued relative to its fair value, according to Glassnode's MVRV-Z score of -0.139.

Related: Why is Litecoin price up today?

The MVRV-Z score represents the ratio between the market and realized cap. So when the market value is significantly higher than realized value, it historically indicates a market top (red zone). Meanwhile, the opposite indicates market bottoms (green zone), as shown below.

Litecoin MVRV-Z score. Source: Glassnode

Litecoin has entered the green zone, which typically precedes strong bullish reversals.

From a technical standpoint, LTC price is well-positioned for a rebound after retesting its multi-month ascending trendline as support.

LTC/USD daily price chart. Source: TradingView

In this case, LTC/USD can climb toward its horizontal resistance level near $100, up about 20% from current prices.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

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Litecoin’s Hashrate Reaches All-Time High, Difficulty Follows Suit

Litecoin’s Hashrate Reaches All-Time High, Difficulty Follows SuitThe blockchain network Litecoin’s computational power reached an all-time high (ATH) on Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2023, at block height 2,411,048, reaching 798.43 terahash per second (TH/s). In addition, Litecoin’s difficulty also reached an all-time high this week, hitting 23,505,031 the following day. Litecoin’s Computational Power Climbs 38% in 30 Days A significant amount of hashrate […]

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