Bitcoin has been trading below its estimated production cost for five consecutive months, creating significant financial pressure on miners. JPMorgan estimates the cost to mine one bitcoin at approximately $78,000, while the asset is currently fetching around $62,500. This disparity has led to about 20% of miners becoming unprofitable, according to data cited by CoinShares. To cover operational expenses, publicly traded mining companies offloaded more than 32,000 bitcoin in the first quarter, a figure exceeding their total sales for the entirety of 2025.
The network is self-correcting as higher-cost miners power down when prices fall below production costs. This reduction in computing power, known as the hashrate, leads to a decrease in mining difficulty. This adjustment occurred in early June, with a 10% drop in difficulty, marking the second such reduction this year. JPMorgan observes that miners are reacting more swiftly than in the past, with increased sensitivity of difficulty to price fluctuations due to more operators operating near breakeven.
The bank anticipates larger and more frequent difficulty adjustments as long as bitcoin remains below its production cost. Despite the cautious outlook for the sector, JPMorgan identifies a potential bullish contrarian signal in the current weak sentiment, noting that accumulation readings, such as whale buying and declining exchange reserves, have been pointing in the same direction this month.