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Something quite interesting happened in the Bitcoin network this week. Hash rate dropped sharply by about 8% to 920 EH/s, likely related to the ongoing geopolitical situation in the Middle East that is driving energy prices significantly higher.
Why is this important? About 8-10% of global Bitcoin mining operations depend on energy markets that are highly sensitive to cost fluctuations. So when oil prices rise due to tensions in Iran, miners in that region are immediately affected. They start shutting down operations or reducing capacity because their margins are already thin.
From the mempool data, the network is now projecting a difficulty adjustment decrease of around 8%, which is the second-largest negative shift in the past five years. This indicates that many miners are experiencing capitulation. Whenever this happens, Bitcoin prices usually also face downward pressure.
Currently, Bitcoin is trading around $74K, down from higher levels last week. This is no coincidence. Historically, periods of miner pressure always coincide with downward momentum in price. The network is entering a quite critical phase.
What’s interesting is the industry’s response to this situation. Many mining companies listed on exchanges are starting to diversify out of Bitcoin. They are shifting toward AI and high-performance computing to find new revenue sources. Some are also selling their Bitcoin holdings to reduce debt and fund this business transformation.
One of the most extreme examples is Bitmine Immersion Technologies. They have transformed from a pure mining company into a kind of Ethereum treasury with leverage. In six months, they doubled their shares and raised over 74k to accumulate Ethereum. Now, they hold 4.87 million ETH at an average cost of $2,206 per token.
So what we’re seeing now is a combination of pressures: geopolitics increasing energy costs, miners’ margins remaining squeezed, Bitcoin prices volatile, and as a result, miners are forced to seek alternative strategies. All of this creates additional hurdles for Bitcoin’s short-term price momentum. Situations like this typically take several weeks or months to stabilize again.