Market Cap: $2.9897T 1.490%
Volume(24h): $72.442B 6.920%
  • Market Cap: $2.9897T 1.490%
  • Volume(24h): $72.442B 6.920%
  • Fear & Greed Index:
  • Market Cap: $2.9897T 1.490%
Cryptos
Topics
Cryptospedia
News
CryptosTopics
Videos
Top News
Cryptos
Topics
Cryptospedia
News
CryptosTopics
Videos
bitcoin
bitcoin

$96268.122503 USD

2.12%

ethereum
ethereum

$1820.701641 USD

1.14%

tether
tether

$1.000135 USD

0.04%

xrp
xrp

$2.141662 USD

1.51%

bnb
bnb

$601.697105 USD

0.60%

solana
solana

$145.938005 USD

1.08%

usd-coin
usd-coin

$1.000021 USD

0.02%

dogecoin
dogecoin

$0.170625 USD

1.29%

cardano
cardano

$0.674504 USD

2.67%

tron
tron

$0.244298 USD

-1.33%

sui
sui

$3.356595 USD

0.93%

chainlink
chainlink

$13.855364 USD

2.48%

avalanche
avalanche

$19.791938 USD

0.85%

stellar
stellar

$0.260915 USD

1.78%

unus-sed-leo
unus-sed-leo

$8.722376 USD

0.76%

Cryptocurrency News Articles

Bitcoin Hashrate Is On the Way Up Again as the Difficulty Has Gone Through a Negative Adjustment

May 07, 2025 at 03:00 pm

On-chain data shows the Bitcoin Hashrate is on the way up again as the Difficulty has gone through a negative adjustment.

Bitcoin Hashrate Is On the Way Up Again as the Difficulty Has Gone Through a Negative Adjustment

On-chain data from Blockchain.com reveals that the Bitcoin Hashrate is heading up again as the Difficulty has gone through a negative adjustment.

Bitcoin miners seem to be back in expansion mode as the latest adjustments to the chain’s Difficulty saw the metric go down.

Bitcoin Hashrate Remains Flat Despite Recent Difficulty Increase

On Saturday, May 3rd, the Bitcoin network went through its latest Difficulty adjustment and eased things up for the miners, breaking a streak of four consecutive increases prior to that.

The “Difficulty” here is a feature built into the BTC blockchain that basically controls how hard the miners find it to mine blocks on the network. This metric’s value changes in response to the pace at which the miners perform their duty.

The chain automatically adjusts its Difficulty about every two weeks and the rule that Satoshi wrote in for it to base these adjustments off is simple: keep the block time consistent around 10 minutes.

This means that when the miners go through blocks at a rate faster than 10 mins per block, the chain is forced to up its Difficulty. Similarly, it has to ease things up if the validators are being slow, so that they can get back up to the standard pace.

Miners become faster or slower at their task when the total computing power employed by them, known as the Hashrate, changes. As the below chart from Blockchain.com shows, miners were in a phase of rapid expansion earlier, which is why BTC had to up its Difficulty four times straight.

Now, the existence of Difficulty has one major consequence for the Bitcoin miners: no matter how much they invest into their facilities, they can’t collectively pull out more block subsidy than the network allows them to.

“Block subsidy” is the BTC reward that the miners receive as compensation for adding a block to the network. It makes up for the major part of the miner income, with the transaction fees occupying a smaller portion.

Since the Difficulty always brings the miners back to a speed of 10 minutes per block, these validators continue to receive about the same amount of this reward every day, regardless of the hashrate.

In other words, a higher amount of computing power competes for the same amount of revenue as before, whenever the Hashrate goes up (note that this is only true following the next Difficulty adjustment; miners can earn differently from the norm in the in-between period).

This suggests that, in theory, validators who fail to expand proportionately to the global Bitcoin Hashrate increase fall behind the competition and earn less income than before, since the collective BTC income of the miners is constrained.

Such miners who suffer from a revenue squeeze following a Difficulty increase might have no choice, but to disconnect from the network. From the Hashrate chart, it’s apparent that the indicator’s value crashed during the last-third of April. It’s possible that the large Difficulty increase was what triggered it.

With the Difficulty now finally observing a cooldown in response to this decline in the Hashrate, miners may once again be encouraged to add to their facilities. And indeed, the most recent trend in the 7-day average of the metric has been pointing in this direction so far.

Disclaimer:info@kdj.com

The information provided is not trading advice. kdj.com does not assume any responsibility for any investments made based on the information provided in this article. Cryptocurrencies are highly volatile and it is highly recommended that you invest with caution after thorough research!

If you believe that the content used on this website infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately (info@kdj.com) and we will delete it promptly.

Other articles published on May 08, 2025