The mining industry is experiencing a subtle turning point. According to the latest analysis by asset management firm VanEck, the current difficulties faced by Bitcoin mining may actually signal the brewing of a strong rebound. Behind this seemingly contradictory judgment lies the deep logic of market operation.
The Mystery of Hash Rate Decline: Why Miner Exit Is Actually Good News
In a recent research report, VanEck revealed a noteworthy historical pattern. Since 2014, whenever the total network hash rate of Bitcoin has contracted, there is a 65% probability that the investment returns over the following 90 days will be positive; whereas when hash rate continues to grow, the probability of positive returns is only 54%.
The logic behind this data is quite profound. The decline in Bitcoin mining activity is often accompanied by a phenomenon—“miner capitulation.” When the price drops and costs rise, squeezing profit margins ruthlessly, less capitalized miners are forced to shut down and exit the market. Some even have to sell their Bitcoin holdings to survive. This “market purge” has historically marked the formation of a bottom, often followed by a strong rebound.
VanEck points out that the current market is playing out this scenario perfectly. As of mid-December, Bitcoin’s total network hash rate has decreased by about 4% over the past month, marking the largest single-month decline since April 2024. More critically, the longer the hash rate remains compressed, the more vigorous the future rebound tends to be.
Profitability Shrinking Rapidly: The Critical Line for Bitcoin Mining
The difficulty of mining can be clearly expressed with an indicator—break-even electricity price. This is the maximum electricity cost that miners can bear without incurring losses.
Taking the mainstream mid-range miner Antminer S19 XP as an example, VanEck’s data shows a concerning trend. The break-even electricity price has dropped sharply from $0.12 per kWh at the end of 2024 to about $0.077 per kWh in mid-December. What does this mean? When electricity affordability rapidly declines, only large miners with low electricity costs and strong capital structures can survive. Small and medium miners are being ruthlessly squeezed out.
This “life-and-death screening” is accelerating. The Matthew Effect in the Bitcoin mining industry is becoming more apparent—weak players are forced out, while the strong accumulate strength in the downturn.
Institutional Funds Quietly Enter the Market: Who Is Buying on Dips
Contrasting sharply with miners’ difficulties, a new force is quietly entering. VanEck found that as mining pressure increases, long-term institutional buyers are gradually taking over the market, especially “hodling companies” that have recently accelerated their dip-buying efforts.
The scale of this accumulation is quite significant. According to the report, from mid-November to mid-December, crypto reserve companies collectively bought about 42,000 Bitcoin, a 4% month-over-month increase, pushing total holdings to approximately 1.09 million coins. Notably, this is the largest single-month institutional accumulation since July to August 2025 (when they added over 128,000 coins in a single month).
This change itself signals that professional institutions are actively betting on the bottom.
Industry Shift and Market Outlook
VanEck’s outlook further deepens the forecast for the future. The report indicates that crypto reserve companies will gradually change their financing strategies, reducing the issuance of common stock (to avoid dilution) and increasingly relying on preferred stock for fundraising, as the main source of capital to buy Bitcoin.
This reveals a profound industry transformation: the ecosystem of Bitcoin mining is being reshaped. Miners, under cost pressures, are forced to reduce production or exit, while institutional capital is seizing the opportunity to deploy. It is a transfer of power and an inevitable process of industry consolidation from decentralization to centralization.
As miners are “filtered out” through capitulation, institutions are accumulating at the bottom, and Bitcoin has risen 1.24% within 24 hours. All these signals seem to point in the same direction—the market is gathering energy for a reversal.
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Market reversal under the "Bitcoin mining dilemma"? VanEck: Sudden drop in hash rate is a bullish signal
The mining industry is experiencing a subtle turning point. According to the latest analysis by asset management firm VanEck, the current difficulties faced by Bitcoin mining may actually signal the brewing of a strong rebound. Behind this seemingly contradictory judgment lies the deep logic of market operation.
The Mystery of Hash Rate Decline: Why Miner Exit Is Actually Good News
In a recent research report, VanEck revealed a noteworthy historical pattern. Since 2014, whenever the total network hash rate of Bitcoin has contracted, there is a 65% probability that the investment returns over the following 90 days will be positive; whereas when hash rate continues to grow, the probability of positive returns is only 54%.
The logic behind this data is quite profound. The decline in Bitcoin mining activity is often accompanied by a phenomenon—“miner capitulation.” When the price drops and costs rise, squeezing profit margins ruthlessly, less capitalized miners are forced to shut down and exit the market. Some even have to sell their Bitcoin holdings to survive. This “market purge” has historically marked the formation of a bottom, often followed by a strong rebound.
VanEck points out that the current market is playing out this scenario perfectly. As of mid-December, Bitcoin’s total network hash rate has decreased by about 4% over the past month, marking the largest single-month decline since April 2024. More critically, the longer the hash rate remains compressed, the more vigorous the future rebound tends to be.
Profitability Shrinking Rapidly: The Critical Line for Bitcoin Mining
The difficulty of mining can be clearly expressed with an indicator—break-even electricity price. This is the maximum electricity cost that miners can bear without incurring losses.
Taking the mainstream mid-range miner Antminer S19 XP as an example, VanEck’s data shows a concerning trend. The break-even electricity price has dropped sharply from $0.12 per kWh at the end of 2024 to about $0.077 per kWh in mid-December. What does this mean? When electricity affordability rapidly declines, only large miners with low electricity costs and strong capital structures can survive. Small and medium miners are being ruthlessly squeezed out.
This “life-and-death screening” is accelerating. The Matthew Effect in the Bitcoin mining industry is becoming more apparent—weak players are forced out, while the strong accumulate strength in the downturn.
Institutional Funds Quietly Enter the Market: Who Is Buying on Dips
Contrasting sharply with miners’ difficulties, a new force is quietly entering. VanEck found that as mining pressure increases, long-term institutional buyers are gradually taking over the market, especially “hodling companies” that have recently accelerated their dip-buying efforts.
The scale of this accumulation is quite significant. According to the report, from mid-November to mid-December, crypto reserve companies collectively bought about 42,000 Bitcoin, a 4% month-over-month increase, pushing total holdings to approximately 1.09 million coins. Notably, this is the largest single-month institutional accumulation since July to August 2025 (when they added over 128,000 coins in a single month).
This change itself signals that professional institutions are actively betting on the bottom.
Industry Shift and Market Outlook
VanEck’s outlook further deepens the forecast for the future. The report indicates that crypto reserve companies will gradually change their financing strategies, reducing the issuance of common stock (to avoid dilution) and increasingly relying on preferred stock for fundraising, as the main source of capital to buy Bitcoin.
This reveals a profound industry transformation: the ecosystem of Bitcoin mining is being reshaped. Miners, under cost pressures, are forced to reduce production or exit, while institutional capital is seizing the opportunity to deploy. It is a transfer of power and an inevitable process of industry consolidation from decentralization to centralization.
As miners are “filtered out” through capitulation, institutions are accumulating at the bottom, and Bitcoin has risen 1.24% within 24 hours. All these signals seem to point in the same direction—the market is gathering energy for a reversal.