The Bitcoin network is approaching its next difficulty adjustment at block 927,360, with estimates pointing to a rise from 149 trillion to nearly 150 trillion, according to CoinWarz. Although the increase is modest, it comes at a time when miners are already operating on razor-thin margins.
Hashprice Near Break-Even Levels
Data from Hashrate Index shows:
- Hashprice: ~$38.3 per PH/s/day
- Break-even for many miners: ~$40 per PH/s/day
- Recent low: below $35 per PH/s/day (Nov 21)
When hashprice dips below the break-even mark, miners—especially smaller or less efficient operations—must decide whether to keep mining at a loss or temporarily shut down machines.
The network’s average 9.97-minute block time helped trigger the most recent difficulty drop from 152.2T → 149.3T, but hashpower remains strong enough to push it upward again.
Hardware Risks: Bitmain Under U.S. Investigation
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is reportedly investigating Bitmain, the world’s dominant ASIC manufacturer (controls ~80% of market share).
Industry Concerns:
- Bitmain machines may have potential for remote access vulnerabilities.
- U.S. restrictions, tariffs, or sanctions could:
- Increase ASIC prices
- Delay shipments
- Slow down mining expansion across North America
- With such market concentration, any disruption could affect global mining capacity.
China’s Mining Landscape: Uptick but No Policy Reversal Expected
China’s share of global hashpower has slightly risen:
- From 13.75% (Q1 2025) → 14% currently, according to Hashrate Index
- Still behind the U.S. and Russia
Historically:
- China’s hash rate fell to 0% in July 2021 after the nationwide ban
- Rose unofficially to 22.29% by Sept 2021
- Cambridge discontinued public mining map updates in early 2022
Will China lift the mining ban?
Experts say no, because:
- Beijing argues crypto activity disturbs financial order
- Concerns over illegal transactions and capital flight
- Strong political and regulatory stance against private crypto mining
Even though some scholars want miners to use excess energy, a formal reversal of the ban is considered highly unlikely.
Overall Outlook
- Difficulty rising despite low profitability shows the network remains strong.
- Miners under cost pressure may face December shutdown decisions if hashprice falls.
- Regulatory and hardware risks—especially involving Bitmain—could impact the global mining supply chain.
- China’s minor hashrate rebound is not enough to change policy, but signals continued underground mining activity.
Sentiment:
Cautious. Network remains resilient, but miner margins, hardware risks, and geopolitical pressures create uncertainty heading into 2026.