Why 2023 Will Be a Test of Resilience for Bitcoin Miners

 | Dec 20, 2022 12:45AM ET

Who has the best debt positioning will determine BTC mining winners in 2023.

Since Bitcoin launched over thirteen years ago, 2022 has been the asset’s third bearish year, with its value dropping 64%. Year-over-year, the last two negative years were 2015 (-58%) and 2019 (-71%).

In prior bear cycles, many Bitcoin miners have exited the mining scene in what is known as miner capitulation. Given the recessionary outlook for 2023, is it about to be the worst year for crypto miners?

h2 Anomalous Miner Hashrate/h2

Elegantly monetized to facilitate a P2P money network, Bitcoin miners buy energy to mine BTC block rewards. During bull runs, when the Bitcoin price is high, miners have high-profit margins as it offsets energy expenditures. This is the period of BTC accumulation and investment in more mining operations.

But during the bear market, miners undergo a Darwinist selection event when the Bitcoin price drops. Only miners who have streamlined their operations while incurring low debt survive the next bull run.

Given previous survival-of-the-fittest selection events, we now see that Bitcoin mining operations have become more resilient. The record hash rate showcases this at a time when the BTC price level returned to November 2020 level. At that point, the network’s hash rate was 90% lower than today.