Bitcoin has now spent five straight months trading below the average cost to mine a single coin, according to a JPMorgan report reviewed by BTCUSA. The extended period of underwater pricing is not just a temporary dip—it’s a structural signal that the mining industry is absorbing serious financial strain. Roughly 20% of the network’s hashrate is now operating at a loss, with smaller and less efficient miners likely bearing the brunt of the squeeze.
This is not the first time miners have faced margin compression, but the duration sets this cycle apart. Previous stress events typically resolved within weeks. The current stretch, starting early in 2025 and continuing through mid-year, points toward deeper issues tied to production costs that refuse to decline even as Bitcoin’s spot price has struggled to regain momentum.
Production costs for Bitcoin miners are not falling in line with spot prices, and JPMorgan’s data makes that clear. Energy prices remain elevated in several key mining jurisdictions, while network difficulty continues to set new records. The halving effect from April 2024 has fully embedded itself, cutting block rewards in half and forcing miners to compete for a shrinking pool of daily issuance. As a result, the estimated average cost to produce one Bitcoin now sits comfortably above current market prices for many operators.
This is a fundamental break from the post-2020 cycle, where rising Bitcoin prices masked rising costs. Today, the opposite is happening: costs are sticky, and demand-side catalysts have been limited. The miners are already deep underwater, and JPMorgan’s five-month timeline suggests this is not a blip.
Despite deteriorating economics, Bitcoin’s total hashrate hasn’t collapsed. That resilience is partly due to large public miners who have secured cheap power contracts and efficient hardware. But it also masks how much stress is concentrated in smaller, private operations. When JPMorgan says about 20% of miners are unprofitable, that likely maps to higher-cost producers who may have been hanging on only because of balance sheet strength from the last bull market.
The April 2024 halving permanently reset the revenue equation. With block rewards cut to 3.125 BTC, miners now depend heavily on transaction fees and Bitcoin price appreciation. Neither has delivered enough to offset the decline. The post-halving squeeze is now entering its harshest phase, and the market is only beginning to price in what that means for the network’s long-term security budget.
When miners operate at a loss, they face two ugly choices: sell their existing Bitcoin holdings to cover costs or shut down operations. Historically, sustained unprofitability has triggered miner capitulation, where forced selling adds downward pressure on spot prices. That kind of feedback loop is exactly what could turn a five-month squeeze into a more dangerous unwind. JPMorgan’s note hints at this without stating it outright—the longer the imbalance persists, the higher the probability of a forced deleveraging event among miners.
The broader market is already fragile. Leverage remains high across derivatives markets, and any capitulation wave could collide with existing long liquidations. As BTCUSA noted earlier, over $10 billion in liquidations sit below key levels, leaving the market vulnerable to a rapid unwind. Miners dumping to stay solvent would add fuel to that fire.
For institutional investors, JPMorgan’s analysis reframes the risk around Bitcoin’s floor. The mining cost is often treated as a rough price support, but when the asset trades below that level for five months, the floor becomes a ceiling. It means that unless production costs fall sharply—which they haven’t—or Bitcoin’s price rises significantly, the mining sector will remain under pressure. That pressure can ripple through related equities, mining ETFs, and even the broader crypto credit market where some miners have outstanding debt.
Public miners like Marathon and Riot have managed better than private competitors, but their stock prices are already reflecting the margin squeeze. The question now is whether institutional capital will view this as a buying opportunity or a warning sign. With Bitcoin stuck in a tight range, the JPMorgan report may reinforce the cautious stance that many traditional allocators have adopted in recent months.
JPMorgan’s five-month timeline isn’t a prediction of doom—it’s a measurement of how deep the mining industry’s adjustment already is. The market is pricing Bitcoin as if mining profitability doesn’t matter, but history suggests otherwise. When 20% of the network operates at a loss, the risk of a forced seller cascade increases with every week that passes without a meaningful price recovery. This isn’t about Bitcoin failing; it’s about the brutal economic reality that after a halving, the weakest hands in mining are always the first to break. The real question is whether that break will be orderly or messy.
<p>The post JPMorgan: Bitcoin Mining Crisis Deepens as Production Costs Stay Above Spot for Five Months first appeared on Crypto News And Market Updates | BTCUSA.</p>


