Close Menu
  • Latest News
    • Bitcoin
    • Ethereum
    • Altcoins
    • Meme Coins
  • Tech
    • Blockchain
    • Security and Privacy
  • Web 3
    • Gaming
  • Legal
    • Legal and Regulatory
    • Adoption
  • Analysis
  • Learn
    • Education
    • Wallets and Exchanges
  • Tools
    • Market Overview
    • Exchange Tool
  • INFO@FREE.CC
What's Hot

Ethereum’s edge over Bitcoin: Can momentum hold or will bulls get trapped?

June 17, 2026

Binance Traders Just Pushed Bitcoin Futures to $800 Trillion

June 17, 2026

Sui Stablecoin Transfers Hit $65 Billion After Gasless Fee P

June 17, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclosure
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Free.cc (Free Cryptocurrency)Free.cc (Free Cryptocurrency)
  • Latest News
    1. Bitcoin
    2. Ethereum
    3. Altcoins
    4. Meme Coins
    5. View All

    Ethereum’s edge over Bitcoin: Can momentum hold or will bulls get trapped?

    June 17, 2026

    Binance Traders Just Pushed Bitcoin Futures to $800 Trillion

    June 17, 2026

    Strategy’s investors are may be rotating out of its preferred stock for another crypto rival

    June 17, 2026

    Bitcoin Miners Face $50B Funding Gap As AI Pivot Separates Winners From Losers

    June 17, 2026

    Ethereum Exchange Reserves Hit a 10-Year Low—Is a Supply Shock Brewing?

    June 16, 2026

    Ripple’s Own Stablecoin Prefers Ethereum Over XRP, Here’s How

    June 16, 2026

    Can ETH Price Reclaim $2K Zone?

    June 16, 2026

    Gareth Soloway’s Bullish Bitcoin, Ethereum and XRP Price Predictions

    June 15, 2026

    Sui Stablecoin Transfers Hit $65 Billion After Gasless Fee P

    June 17, 2026

    Reports Say Standard Chartered Sees UNI At $100 As RWA Thesis Builds

    June 16, 2026

    Solana Policy Institute Urges Senate To Protect Developers In CLARITY Act Debate

    June 16, 2026

    Ethereum Research Proposal Targets Post-Quantum Wallet Security At Low Gas Cost

    June 16, 2026

    Dogecoin Cash Files U.S. Patent for DOGP Blockchain Framework

    June 15, 2026

    How SIREN Went From AI Memecoin to Boom-and-Bust

    June 8, 2026

    Meme Coin Market Faces Imbalance as Supply Rises, Demand Falls

    April 4, 2026

    Crypto Interest Rising Toward Meme Coin Sector

    January 9, 2026

    Ethereum’s edge over Bitcoin: Can momentum hold or will bulls get trapped?

    June 17, 2026

    Binance Traders Just Pushed Bitcoin Futures to $800 Trillion

    June 17, 2026

    Sui Stablecoin Transfers Hit $65 Billion After Gasless Fee P

    June 17, 2026

    Strategy’s investors are may be rotating out of its preferred stock for another crypto rival

    June 17, 2026
  • Tech
    1. Blockchain
    2. Security and Privacy
    3. View All

    Merck and Hashgraph Group launch Hedera-based product passport for EU compliance

    June 12, 2026

    COTI and Midnight Foundation Partner to Advance the Global Privacy Ecosystem

    June 11, 2026

    Cardano Gets Exposure From Olympics Committee

    June 11, 2026

    How Privacy and Composability Trade-Offs Differ

    June 11, 2026

    Rokarolla Trojan Combines Banking Fraud With Device Surveillance

    June 16, 2026

    FBI Warns Courier Cash Pickups Are Driving Crypto Scams

    June 16, 2026

    What The FIFA World Cup 2026 Means For Fraud

    June 12, 2026

    New SilabRAT Trojan Hijacks Sessions to Steal Crypto

    June 10, 2026

    Ethereum’s edge over Bitcoin: Can momentum hold or will bulls get trapped?

    June 17, 2026

    Binance Traders Just Pushed Bitcoin Futures to $800 Trillion

    June 17, 2026

    Sui Stablecoin Transfers Hit $65 Billion After Gasless Fee P

    June 17, 2026

    Strategy’s investors are may be rotating out of its preferred stock for another crypto rival

    June 17, 2026
  • Web 3
    1. Gaming
    2. View All

    GMATRIXS and Plum Protocol Partner to Blend GameFi with Meme Assets, Driving Multi-Chain Web3 User Experience

    June 16, 2026

    Crypto game studio Uncharted to shutdown along with Fishing Frenzy

    June 15, 2026

    Pudgy Penguins Halts Web3 Mobile Game Pudgy Party to Focus on Pudgy World

    June 14, 2026

    If SpaceX Gets a bStock, Tokenized Finance Faces Its First True IPO Hype Test

    June 12, 2026

    Ethereum’s edge over Bitcoin: Can momentum hold or will bulls get trapped?

    June 17, 2026

    Binance Traders Just Pushed Bitcoin Futures to $800 Trillion

    June 17, 2026

    Sui Stablecoin Transfers Hit $65 Billion After Gasless Fee P

    June 17, 2026

    Strategy’s investors are may be rotating out of its preferred stock for another crypto rival

    June 17, 2026
  • Legal
    1. Legal and Regulatory
    2. Adoption
    3. View All

    Congress moves to rebuild crypto crime task force after DOJ dismantled its dedicated crypto team

    June 15, 2026

    How the SEC’s five-year plan could accelerate tokenized capital markets

    June 15, 2026

    Appeals Court Upholds Sam Bankman-Fried’s 25-Year Fraud Sentence in FTX Case: Report

    June 15, 2026

    Millions of EU crypto users face exchange cutoff as MiCA deadline hits in days

    June 14, 2026

    Bitcoin DeFi’s demand problem is becoming harder to ignore

    June 17, 2026

    Standard Chartered’s $100 Uniswap call exposes the open DeFi problem Wall Street may need to solve

    June 16, 2026

    The financial products you didn’t know Bitcoin was powering

    June 15, 2026

    Banks are buying Bitcoin vaults, but a quantum problem may be waiting inside

    June 14, 2026

    Ethereum’s edge over Bitcoin: Can momentum hold or will bulls get trapped?

    June 17, 2026

    Binance Traders Just Pushed Bitcoin Futures to $800 Trillion

    June 17, 2026

    Sui Stablecoin Transfers Hit $65 Billion After Gasless Fee P

    June 17, 2026

    Strategy’s investors are may be rotating out of its preferred stock for another crypto rival

    June 17, 2026
  • Analysis

    SpaceX is trading like a $2T meme stock after its record IPO

    June 17, 2026

    What History Suggests for BTC Price

    June 17, 2026

    Will Elon Musk Drive More SPCX Demand?

    June 16, 2026

    ‘The Good News Is Priced In’: BofA Equity Strategist Says US Stocks Unlikely To Clock Market-Wide Gains Going Forward

    June 16, 2026

    XRP just beat Ethereum, Solana and others in 90-Day RWA flows as traders pile back into the token

    June 16, 2026
  • Learn
    1. Education
    2. Wallets and Exchanges
    3. View All

    What Is BChat? The Decentralized Messaging App Built for Privacy

    June 2, 2026

    What Is an AI Prompt Injection Attack? The Hidden Threat Hijacking Your Chatbots

    May 31, 2026

    What Is AI Jailbreaking? A Beginner’s Guide to the Cat-and-Mouse Game Behind Every Chatbot

    May 17, 2026

    What’s on the Ethereum Roadmap: Glamsterdam, Hegota and Beyond

    March 30, 2026

    HYPE ETFs quietly pulled $161M in one month as Wall Street buys crypto’s on-chain exchange bet

    June 15, 2026

    Crypto exchanges are opening a two-front war for the stock market

    June 12, 2026

    Crypto’s killer app may be selling stocks after its own tokens failed retail

    June 10, 2026

    Vitalik wants DeFi price crashes to stop triggering automatic liquidations

    June 4, 2026

    Ethereum’s edge over Bitcoin: Can momentum hold or will bulls get trapped?

    June 17, 2026

    Binance Traders Just Pushed Bitcoin Futures to $800 Trillion

    June 17, 2026

    Sui Stablecoin Transfers Hit $65 Billion After Gasless Fee P

    June 17, 2026

    Strategy’s investors are may be rotating out of its preferred stock for another crypto rival

    June 17, 2026
  • Tools
    • Market Overview
    • Exchange Tool
  • INFO@FREE.CC
Free.cc (Free Cryptocurrency)Free.cc (Free Cryptocurrency)
Home»Analysis»Bitcoin miners are bleeding at $90,000, but the “death spiral” math hits a hard ceiling
Analysis

Bitcoin miners are bleeding at $90,000, but the “death spiral” math hits a hard ceiling

December 22, 2025No Comments9 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Bitcoin’s “miners are dumping” story is comforting in the way simple stories always are. Price slides, miners run out of oxygen, coins hit exchanges, and the price is shoved around by a single, easy villain.

But miners are not a single actor, and selling pressure isn’t just a mood. It’s math, contracts, and deadlines. When stress shows up, what matters is not whether miners want to sell, but whether they have to, and how much they can sell without breaking the business they’re trying to keep alive.

That’s why the most useful way to think about a miner “capitulation” is as a thought experiment. Imagine you’re running a mine right now, in a market where the hashrate ribbon flipped into inversion territory, and price trades below a rough, difficulty-based estimate for average all-in sustaining cost, around $90,000.

At the same time, total miner holdings sit at around 50,000 BTC: not small by any measure, but not bottomless either.

Now you’ve got a simple question that sounds dramatic. If price sits below the average AISC line for a while, how many coins can you push out over 30 to 90 days before lenders, power contracts, and your own operating reality push back?

AISC is a moving target, not a single number

All-in sustaining cost, or AISC, is crypto’s borrowed term from mining and commodities, but it earns its keep because it forces you to stop pretending electricity is the only bill. AISC is basically a number that determines whether you can stay in business. Not “can you keep the machines on today,” but “can you keep the operation healthy enough that it still exists next quarter.”

You can think of Bitcoin miners’ AISC as having three layers, even if different research shops draw the boundaries differently.

The first layer is the one everyone understands: direct operating cash costs. Electricity sits at the center of it, because the meter runs whether you’re feeling bullish or not. Add hosting fees (if you don’t own your site), repairs, pool fees, network ops, and the people who keep the facility from turning into an expensive space heater.

The second layer is the one the memes skip: sustaining capex. This isn’t growth capex: sustaining capex is the money you spend to stop your fleet from slowly dying. Fans fail, hashboards degrade, containers rust, and, more importantly, the network gets tougher. Even if your machines are fine, you can lose a share of the pie if everyone else upgrades and you don’t.

That’s where difficulty comes in. Bitcoin adjusts mining difficulty so blocks keep arriving roughly on schedule. When hashrate rises, difficulty ratchets up, and the same machine earns fewer BTC for the same energy burn.

When hashrate falls, difficulty can ease, and the remaining miners get a slightly better bite. The AISC framing we’re using is explicitly based on difficulty, which is a clean way to capture this moving target without needing every miner’s private power contract.

The third layer is what turns stress into forced behavior: corporate costs and financing. A private operator might care mostly about power and maintenance. A public miner with debt cares about interest payments, covenants, liquidity buffers, and the ability to refinance.

See also  Why Bitcoin ETFs started to bleed out as four-day outflows hit $1.34B

This is why AISC changes over time in a way that makes single-number debates feel silly. It changes when difficulty changes, and when the fleet mix changes (older machines get pushed out, newer ones come in).

It changes when the power environment changes, especially for miners exposed to spot pricing, and it changes when capital costs change, which is why a miner can look stable at one point in the cycle and fragile at another with the same hash output.

So when price dips below an average AISC estimate like ~$90,000, it doesn’t mean the whole network is instantly underwater, just that the center of mass is uncomfortable. Some miners are fine, some are pinched, and some are in triage. The stress is real, but the response is uneven, and that unevenness is what keeps the “everyone dumps at once” from being the default outcome.

There’s another reason the default outcome isn’t a dump. Miners have more levers than just selling their BTC: they can shut down marginal machines, curtail for grid payments, roll hedges, and renegotiate hosting terms. And, as previously covered by CryptoSlate, many now have side businesses tied to AI data-centers, which can buffer a bad mining month.

That gets us to the real question, which is when stress is on, how much selling is structurally required?

The dump math: what can be sold without breaking the business

Start with the one flow the protocol hands you, whether you’re happy about it or not. Post-halving, new BTC issuance from the block subsidy is about 450 BTC per day, which is about 13,500 BTC per month.

If miners sold 100% of new issuance, that’s the clean ceiling for flow selling. In reality, miners don’t coordinate, and not all of them need to sell everything they mine. But as a thought experiment, 450 BTC/day is the maximum new supply that can hit the market without touching any pre-existing inventory.

Now bring in inventory, because that’s what the scary headlines point at. We’ll rely on Glassnode’s estimate that miners have around 50,000 BTC on hand. A 50,000 BTC stockpile sounds large until you turn it into a time series. Spread across 60 days, 10% of that inventory is 5,000 BTC, which is about 83 BTC/day. Spread across 90 days, 30% is 15,000 BTC, which is about 167 BTC/day.

That’s the basic shape of miner forced distribution in a stress window: flow selling does most of the work, and inventory selling adds a smaller but still meaningful amount, unless the stress is severe enough that inventory becomes the primary tool.

So let’s put three price paths under the toy model: $90,000, $80,000, $70,000. Then tie them to three middle-ground regimes that map to how miners behave when margins get thin.

In the base case, miners sell half of the issuance and touch no inventory. That’s 225 BTC/day. Over 60 days, that’s 13,500 BTC of issuance in total times 50%, so 6,750 BTC. Over 90 days, 10,125 BTC.
In a conservative stress case, miners sell 100% of issuance and also sell 10% of inventory over 60 days. That’s 450 BTC/day from issuance plus 83 BTC/day from inventory, about 533 BTC/day total.

See also  Bitcoin Sharks Are Accumulating Heavily—What This Means for BTC Price

In a severe stress case, miners sell 100% of issuance and sell 30% of inventory over 90 days. That’s 450 plus 167, about 617 BTC/day.

Price (USD/BTC) Horizon (days) Issuance sold % Treasury tap % Issuance sold (BTC) Treasury sold (BTC) Total sold (BTC) Avg BTC/day Avg USD/day ETF equiv @ $500M (BTC) Miner vs ETF (BTC/day)
90,000 60 25% 10% 6,750 5,000 11,750 195.8 17,625,000 5,556 195.8 vs 5,556
90,000 60 25% 30% 6,750 15,000 21,750 362.5 32,625,000 5,556 362.5 vs 5,556
90,000 60 50% 10% 13,500 5,000 18,500 308.3 27,750,000 5,556 308.3 vs 5,556
90,000 60 50% 30% 13,500 15,000 28,500 475.0 42,750,000 5,556 475.0 vs 5,556
90,000 60 100% 10% 27,000 5,000 32,000 533.3 48,000,000 5,556 533.3 vs 5,556
90,000 60 100% 30% 27,000 15,000 42,000 700.0 63,000,000 5,556 700.0 vs 5,556
90,000 90 25% 10% 10,125 5,000 15,125 168.1 15,125,000 5,556 168.1 vs 5,556
90,000 90 25% 30% 10,125 15,000 25,125 279.2 25,125,000 5,556 279.2 vs 5,556
90,000 90 50% 10% 20,250 5,000 25,250 280.6 25,250,000 5,556 280.6 vs 5,556
90,000 90 50% 30% 20,250 15,000 35,250 391.7 35,250,000 5,556 391.7 vs 5,556
90,000 90 100% 10% 40,500 5,000 45,500 505.6 45,500,000 5,556 505.6 vs 5,556
90,000 90 100% 30% 40,500 15,000 55,500 616.7 55,500,000 5,556 616.7 vs 5,556
80,000 60 25% 10% 6,750 5,000 11,750 195.8 15,666,667 6,250 195.8 vs 6,250
80,000 60 25% 30% 6,750 15,000 21,750 362.5 29,000,000 6,250 362.5 vs 6,250
80,000 60 50% 10% 13,500 5,000 18,500 308.3 24,666,667 6,250 308.3 vs 6,250
80,000 60 50% 30% 13,500 15,000 28,500 475.0 38,000,000 6,250 475.0 vs 6,250
80,000 60 100% 10% 27,000 5,000 32,000 533.3 42,666,667 6,250 533.3 vs 6,250
80,000 60 100% 30% 27,000 15,000 42,000 700.0 56,000,000 6,250 700.0 vs 6,250
80,000 90 25% 10% 10,125 5,000 15,125 168.1 13,450,000 6,250 168.1 vs 6,250
80,000 90 25% 30% 10,125 15,000 25,125 279.2 22,333,333 6,250 279.2 vs 6,250
80,000 90 50% 10% 20,250 5,000 25,250 280.6 22,450,000 6,250 280.6 vs 6,250
80,000 90 50% 30% 20,250 15,000 35,250 391.7 31,333,333 6,250 391.7 vs 6,250
80,000 90 100% 10% 40,500 5,000 45,500 505.6 40,500,000 6,250 505.6 vs 6,250
80,000 90 100% 30% 40,500 15,000 55,500 616.7 49,333,333 6,250 616.7 vs 6,250
70,000 60 25% 10% 6,750 5,000 11,750 195.8 13,708,333 7,143 195.8 vs 7,143
70,000 60 25% 30% 6,750 15,000 21,750 362.5 25,375,000 7,143 362.5 vs 7,143
70,000 60 50% 10% 13,500 5,000 18,500 308.3 21,583,333 7,143 308.3 vs 7,143
70,000 60 50% 30% 13,500 15,000 28,500 475.0 33,250,000 7,143 475.0 vs 7,143
70,000 60 100% 10% 27,000 5,000 32,000 533.3 37,333,333 7,143 533.3 vs 7,143
70,000 60 100% 30% 27,000 15,000 42,000 700.0 49,000,000 7,143 700.0 vs 7,143
70,000 90 25% 10% 10,125 5,000 15,125 168.1 11,766,667 7,143 168.1 vs 7,143
70,000 90 25% 30% 10,125 15,000 25,125 279.2 19,542,500 7,143 279.2 vs 7,143
70,000 90 50% 10% 20,250 5,000 25,250 280.6 19,642,000 7,143 280.6 vs 7,143
70,000 90 50% 30% 20,250 15,000 35,250 391.7 27,417,500 7,143 391.7 vs 7,143
70,000 90 100% 10% 40,500 5,000 45,500 505.6 35,392,000 7,143 505.6 vs 7,143
70,000 90 100% 30% 40,500 15,000 55,500 616.7 43,167,500 7,143 616.7 vs 7,143
See also  How Bitcoin Adoption in the U.S. Could Double by 2025—Insights from the Bitcoin Conference

Those are the upper-bound sketches that answer a narrower question: what does the market allow?

To understand how much the market would notice, we’ll use the simplest comparator readers already understand: ETF flow days, measured in BTC-equivalent. ETF outflows are only around 2.5% of BTC-denominated AUM, about $4.5 billion, and CryptoSlate previously described them as more technical than conviction-driven. You don’t even need to litigate motive to use the comparison, because the point is scale.

At $90,000 per coin, a $100 million day is about 1,111 BTC. At $80,000, it’s 1,250 BTC. At $70,000, it’s about 1,429 BTC. Suddenly, the miner numbers look less like a monster under the bed and more like something you can place on the same shelf as flows the market digests all the time.

A severe miner distribution sketch, say 600 BTC/day, is roughly half of a $100 million ETF day at $90,000. That can still move price if it’s dumped into thin books, or if liquidity is fragile on a weekend, or if it clusters into a few ugly hours. But the brute-force story of miners flooding the market runs into two ceilings: the issuance and the finite inventory that miners are willing and able to liquidate.

There’s also the execution detail that matters more than people want it to. A lot of miner selling is not a market order slapped into the public order book. It can be routed through OTC desks, structured as forward sales, or handled as part of broader treasury management. That doesn’t erase selling pressure, but it changes how it prints on the tape. When people expect a visible waterfall and get a slow grind, the effect on the market is dampened.

So what would turn this from an orderly drip into something uglier? It would certainly require more than just the price dropping below ASIC. The trigger is when the financing layer takes over the decision. If a miner needs to defend a liquidity minimum, meet collateral terms, or handle a refinancing wall in bad market conditions, then inventory turns from optional to necessary.

That’s the sober answer to the viral question. Even when stress is on, and the ribbon is inverted, there are real limits to what miners can dump in a month or a quarter. If you want a practical ceiling, the thought experiment keeps pulling you back to the same zone: a few hundred BTC per day in mild stress, and something like 500 to 650 BTC per day in harsh stress windows that include inventory taps, with the exact number hinging on power terms and debt constraints you can plug in later.

And if you’re trying to guess what moves the tape, the punchline is annoyingly unromantic. The market tends to care less about the narrative label on a seller and more about the cadence, the venue, and the surrounding liquidity. Miners can add weight to a down week, but the idea that they have an infinite trapdoor under price does not survive contact with the balance sheet.

Bitcoin bleeding ceiling Death Hard hits Math miners Spiral
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Ethereum’s edge over Bitcoin: Can momentum hold or will bulls get trapped?

June 17, 2026

Binance Traders Just Pushed Bitcoin Futures to $800 Trillion

June 17, 2026

Bitcoin Miners Face $50B Funding Gap As AI Pivot Separates Winners From Losers

June 17, 2026

Bitcoin DeFi’s demand problem is becoming harder to ignore

June 17, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

the real legacy of Biden-era crypto policy

April 9, 2026

Why Traders Are Swapping BTC for Bullion

April 4, 2026

Stay ahead with the latest crypto news, market updates, blockchain insights, and trends. Your trusted source for everything happening in the digital asset world.


We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube
Top Insights

Ethereum’s edge over Bitcoin: Can momentum hold or will bulls get trapped?

June 17, 2026

Binance Traders Just Pushed Bitcoin Futures to $800 Trillion

June 17, 2026

Sui Stablecoin Transfers Hit $65 Billion After Gasless Fee P

June 17, 2026
Get Informed

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news From Free.cc directly in your Inbox!

  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclosure
© 2026 free.cc - All rights reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.