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Here's the but of the FUD around Bitcoin mining

1y ago
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Bitcoin mining continues to show signs of volatility. With increasing costs to mine and unpredictable revenues, will the interest in mining continue to grow or will miners move on to greener proof-of-work pastures?

Here’s AMBCrypto’s Price Prediction for Bitcoin [BTC] for 2022-2023

One of the reasons behind the growing FUD among Bitcoin miners is the fluctuation in revenue being generated by miners. In fact, the same has been consistently volatile over the last few months. 

Parallely, Bitcoin's hashrate has also continued to hike, with the same appreciating by 10% over the last 30 days, according to Messari.

A lot of uncertainty around the revenue being generated, coupled with a growing hashtrate, could increase selling pressure on miners.

Source: Glassnode

Another indicator of growing selling pressure would be the decline in miners' reserves. As can be seen from chart, Miners' Reserves for Bitcoin have declined significantly over the last 3 months. This metric highlights the reserves that Bitcoin miners have not yet sold. When miners start selling, it could lead to price drop.

However, despite the decline in revenue being generated and high sell pressure, the miner inflows for Bitcoin miners remained stable and did not witness a lot of fluctuations, according to CryptoQuant. This is a sign that the number of coins that were received as a reward for mining remained the same, despite volatility in other areas.

Source: CryptoQuant

Fear, uncertainty and clout

The FUD surrounding mining could have led to the decline in weighted sentiment for Bitcoin. As is evident from the chart attached herein, over the past week, the weighted sentiment went south for $BTC.

A decline in weighted sentiment implies that the crypto-community had more negative than positive things to say about Bitcoin, at the time of writing. Bitcoin was also observed to be loosing its footing on the social front.

According to LunarCrush, a social media analytics firms, over the last 3 months, Bitcoin's social mentions and engagements have fallen. In fact, the number of social mentions for Bitcoin depreciated by 19% and the number of engagements fell by 29% over the last 90 days.

Source: Santiment

And yet, despite growing negative sentiment and declining number of engagements, the number of new addresses on Bitcoin's network have continued to grow.

According to Glassnode, the amount of new addresses on Bitcoin hit a 10-month high and 17 thousand new addresses were registered. This influx of new addresses could be a positive for $BTC’s prices. 

The future of Bitcoin's price and the fate of its miners will continue to be interlinked. It remains to be seen whether miners are willing to weather this bearish storm or are they soon going to jump ship.

The post Here's the but of the FUD around Bitcoin mining appeared first on AMBCrypto.

1y ago
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0

bearish:

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