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Just noticed Bitcoin's hashrate has been taking a hit lately - dropped about 8% in the past week down to 920 EH/s. Pretty significant move, and it seems to be tied to the energy situation in the Middle East pushing oil prices up. Since roughly 8-10% of global mining operates in energy-sensitive regions, when oil spikes like this, it hits mining operations pretty hard.
The network difficulty is looking at a downward adjustment of around 8-10%, which would be the second-largest negative move in the past five years. When hashrate falls this hard, it usually signals miner capitulation - meaning a lot of smaller operations are struggling. Historically, whenever we see this kind of hashrate pressure, bitcoin price tends to follow down. Right now BTC is trading around 74K, so there's definitely some downside pressure.
What's interesting is how this all cascades - miners are getting squeezed on margins, so they're diversifying into AI computing and selling bitcoin just to keep operations afloat. That creates more selling pressure on price. The whole mining sector is feeling it when energy costs spike like this. Watching the hashrate adjustments is usually a good indicator of where miner health is at, and these numbers suggest things are pretty stressed right now.