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Tough Times for Bitcoin Miners: First Half of August Yields Just a Fraction of July’s Profits

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With the first half of August in the rearview mirror, it’s clear that bitcoin miners are facing a challenging month, having only accumulated 36.36% of the total revenue they made in July. A combination of bitcoin’s price fluctuations and reduced onchain fees has left miners in a much tighter spot.

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Tough Times for Bitcoin Miners: First Half of August Yields Just a Fraction of July’s Profits

Bitcoin Miners Face a Hard Month

The decline in bitcoin’s hashprice since July 29 hasn’t helped matters, plummeting to a low of under $39 per petahash per second on Aug. 4 and 5. For context, hashprice measures the earnings miners make per unit of computing power (measured in PH/s per day). Essentially, when hashprice is high, mining becomes more lucrative; when it’s low, profits dwindle.

Since that early August dip, hashprice has bounced back slightly to around $42 per PH/s, but bitcoin’s price hasn’t provided much relief. It has dipped below the $60,000 mark multiple times this month. Notably, on Aug. 5, bitcoin dropped to $49,577 on Bitstamp, marking its lowest point since February 2024. The challenges also stem from market participants paying much lower fees despite ongoing onchain activity.

As of Aug. 14, 2024, the average fee paid per transaction on the Bitcoin blockchain was 0.000014 BTC, roughly $0.83. This translates to a fee rate of about 6.9 satoshis per virtual byte (sat/vB). The median transaction fee has been even lower at 0.0000042 BTC, or $0.249, which works out to around 2.1 sat/vB. July has been the toughest month for miners in 2024, and August isn’t looking much better.

You might expect a decent month for BTC miners to bring in at least 50% of what they earned last month, which was $951.11 million. But so far, mining participants have only raked in 36.36% of that amount, or $345.8 million, between Aug. 1 and Aug. 14. In July, bitcoin miners earned $24.9 million from onchain fees. During the first two weeks of August, they’ve gathered $6.43 million in fees, which accounts for just 25.82% of what they brought in last month.

What do you think about the first two weeks of August in terms of mining revenue? Share your thoughts and opinions about this subject in the comments section below.


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