Bitcoin miners are aggressively drawing down reserves to shore up their balance sheets against a historic collapse in revenue efficiency.
Data from CryptoQuant reveals that miners have transferred more than 30,000 Bitcoins (worth about $2.6 billion) from wallets since November 21st.
Bitcoin mining faces end of life as reserves fall to historic lows
As a result, the miners’ total reserves decreased to 1,803,000 BTC due to the outflow, the lowest level ever.

Bitcoin Miners Reserve. Source: CryptoQuant
This sudden liquidity event signals that operators are pivoting from accumulation to survival, and are forced to monetize hard assets to cover operating expenses as cash flow dries up.
The trigger for the decline was a significant deterioration in the mining economy.
Bitcoin hash prices have fallen more than 50% in recent weeks, hitting an all-time low of $34.49 per petahash/second, according to Hash Rate Index data.
HashPrice is the industry standard for tracking daily revenue per unit of computing power.

Bitcoin hash price over the past year. Source: Hashrate Index
For context, even during the depths of the Chinese mining ban in 2021 and the bear market in 2022, this index rarely fell below $50.
Current levels mean that for all but the most efficient operators, the cost of producing new Bitcoin exceeds the market price of the asset.
Compounding the pain is a stubborn disconnect between pricing and network issues. Bitcoin has corrected 22% over the past month, trading around $86,075, but the network’s total computing power refuses to change.
The global hashrate is still rising above 1 zetahash, suggesting a high-stakes game is playing out across the sector.
This means that well-capitalized public miners are keeping their next-generation fleets online despite negative profit margins. They effectively subsidize production through stock issues and cash reserves.
This strategy aims to exclude smaller private competitors that lack access to capital markets.
Considering this, industry analysts have warned that if Bitcoin prices do not regain their upward trend soon, the sector could face a prolonged wave of capitulation.
In that scenario, embattled miners could be forced to liquidate not only their Bitcoin holdings but also their physical infrastructure.
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