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The Bitcoin miner sell-off looks close to exhaustion marking impending reversal in market pressure
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CryptoSlate preferred on 
Bitcoin miners are starting to show the strain that often appears near a market washout, but one key part of the usual reset is still missing. The biggest operators are still selling enough BTC to keep a fresh supply flowing into the market.
Bitcoin miners are moving toward a classic washout point, while the selling phase still hangs over the market
Bitcoin miners are closer to exhaustion than they were a few weeks ago, which has put a familiar bear-market milestone back on the table.
The pressure inside the mining business has been intense. In its Q1 2026 mining report, CoinShares showed hashprice sliding from roughly $63 per PH/s/day in July 2025 to around $28 to $30 by early March 2026, a brutal compression in miner revenue that pushed a large slice of the global fleet toward unprofitability.
CoinShares estimated that roughly 15% to 20% of global miners were operating at a loss at that revenue level, which gives the current cycle a clear economic trigger rather than a vague sentiment narrative.
Why this matters: miners are one of Bitcoin’s most important steady sources of supply. When they are forced to sell more of what they mine, or dip into reserves, that can keep weighing on price even when sentiment starts to improve.
That pressure has started to show up in network conditions. The Bitcoin difficulty chart from CoinWarz shows difficulty down 4.19% over the past 30 days and 6.27% over the past 90 days, with another adjustment projected for April 18, 2026.
Difficulty declines usually signal that weaker operators are getting pushed out, machines are coming offline, and the strongest miners are getting more breathing room. That kind of reset often appears near the late stages of a miner capitulation phase, which is why the current setup has drawn so much attention.
Capitulation starts with stress. The more consequential shift arrives when miners stop selling large chunks of their treasuries to fund operations, debt service, and expansion. That second step carries more weight for Bitcoin because it changes the flow of coins hitting the market every day.
A miner with stable economics can keep more of the BTC it produces. A miner under pressure sends those coins into spot supply.
The latest public miner updates show that this second step has not been widely adopted. Riot Platforms produced 1,473 BTC in the first quarter of 2026 and sold 3,778 BTC during the same period, ending the quarter with 15,680 BTC on its balance sheet.
That number captures the tension inside the market. Network stress has eased enough to fuel bottom-call chatter, while one of the sector’s largest operators is still selling far more Bitcoin than it mined during the quarter.
MARA sold 15,133 BTC between March 4 and March 25, a move tied to debt repurchases totaling roughly $1 billion. CleanSpark produced 568 BTC in February and sold 553.02 BTC, almost its entire monthly output.
The present moment calls for precise language. Miners are moving toward a historic bear market milestone because the economics are harsh enough to force weak hands out and because difficulty has started to ease.
The accumulation phase, however, has not clearly restarted. A real turn in miner behavior would show up as treasury stabilization, lower sales relative to production, and a pattern where major operators begin keeping more of the Bitcoin they mine.
That set of signals would tighten the supply side of the market in a visible way. The current data show a sector closer to the end of forced selling than it was earlier in the year, with plenty of evidence that forced selling remains active.
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Infographic showing Bitcoin miner capitulation, declining revenue per hash, network stress, and a strategic pivot toward AI-driven revenue streams
Balance-sheet stress is driving miner behavior, and keeping a steady stream of Bitcoin supply in circulation
The sharpest way to understand miner selling is to strip out the jargon and follow the cash demands. Mining companies face power bills, payroll, hosting expenses, equipment financing, and debt maturities in fiat terms.
They earn Bitcoin, while many of their obligations arrive in dollars. When revenue per unit of computing power collapses, treasury sales become a funding mechanism.
That dynamic turned recent miner activity into a pressure point for Bitcoin’s market structure.
Riot’s first quarter numbers made that pressure visible in a way no on-chain abstraction could match. Selling 3,778 BTC while producing 1,473 BTC says the company leaned on existing reserves rather than current output alone.
MARA’s March sale made the same point from a different angle. The company used a massive BTC sale to support debt management, a reminder that miners are part crypto businesses and part capital-intensive industrial operators.
CleanSpark’s February update showed the operating version of the same reality, with almost all monthly production sold. Those disclosures show exactly where the strain is sitting, and they frame the current market more clearly than generic references to miner stress.
The broader reserve picture also fits that interpretation. In February, CryptoSlate reported that miner-linked wallets held around 1.801 million BTC, while the dollar value of those reserves had fallen more than 20% over roughly two months to around $133 billion.
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That decline did not happen in a vacuum. Lower Bitcoin prices from the 2025 peak, weak fee income, and still-heavy competition inside the network all combined to drain the cushion miners usually rely on during tougher conditions.
For Bitcoin itself, this keeps one of the market’s most important supply channels in focus. Miners produce fresh coins every day.
During healthier phases, a portion of that output stays off the market because operators can afford to hold it. During stress phases, newly mined coins and older treasury holdings get sold to meet real obligations.
That flow can weigh on price even when sentiment improves, and other bullish narratives gather momentum.
The current price backdrop makes the setup especially sensitive. According to CryptoSlate Bitcoin price data, BTC is trading at $69,900, up 4.38% over 24 hours, 3.63% over seven days, and 2.81% over 30 days, while still sitting 44.61% below its October 6, 2025, all-time high of $126,198.
That leaves Bitcoin in an interesting position. The market has enough upward movement to revive bottoming calls and enough distance from the peak to keep miners under financial strain.
A bounce inside that kind of structure often reveals who was selling because they wanted to and who was selling because they had to.
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Difficulty relief, ETF demand, and the AI pivot will decide whether miner accumulation returns or the cycle changes shape
That distinction shapes the path ahead. If treasury depletion slows and public miners start reporting sales below production, the market would gain evidence that balance-sheet stress is finally fading.
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If major operators continue to monetize reserves during periods of price strength, the relief phase can last longer and weigh on upside attempts. The next few production updates from listed miners carry real significance because they offer direct proof of whether corporate behavior is changing or whether the selling cycle still has room to run.
Three forces now sit at the center of the next move: difficulty relief, outside demand for Bitcoin, and the changing business model of large miners. Each one affects whether the sector can shift from survival mode into accumulation mode.
The first force is difficulty. Lower difficulty gives surviving miners a larger share of network rewards and eases the immediate revenue squeeze.
The projected April 18 adjustment on CoinWarz has therefore taken on extra importance. A deeper cut would offer weaker operators less room to recover than stronger, well-capitalized miners, which could further concentrate production in the hands of firms better able to choose when they sell.
That would move the market closer to a real accumulation restart. A shallow adjustment or a quick rebound in competition would keep the pressure on the margin alive.
The second force is outside demand, especially from U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs. Farside ETF flow data shows positive net flows of $69.4 million on March 30 and $117.5 million on March 31, followed by a $173.7 million outflow on April 1 and a small $9 million inflow on April 2.
That pattern captures the current market mood. Demand is present, though it has not settled into a strong, uninterrupted absorption phase.
ETF buyers can offset miner selling when flows run consistently positive. Choppy flows leave the market with less protection from fresh supply.
The third force may prove the most important over a longer horizon. According to CoinShares, listed miners could derive as much as 70% of revenue from AI by the end of 2026, up from roughly 30% today, as power access and data-center infrastructure become more valuable to high-performance computing customers.
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More than $70 billion in GPU colocation and cloud-related deals were announced across 2025 and early 2026, turning mining companies into infrastructure plays tied to a much larger capital cycle. That changes incentives.
A miner with an attractive AI-hosting opportunity may choose to reduce debt, secure expansion funding, or reallocate power away from Bitcoin stockpiling.
This is where the old playbook starts to blur. Historic miner capitulation milestones still offer useful context because the business remains cyclical, and forced selling still leaves fingerprints in treasury behavior, difficulty, and reserve drawdowns.
Yet the next phase may not look like a simple return to old patterns. Some operators could stop aggressive BTC selling because mining economics improve.
Others could keep selling because their strategic focus has shifted toward AI-linked revenue. A traditional accumulation signal may arrive later than many expect, or it may appear in a narrower slice of the industry rather than across the whole miner cohort.
That leaves Bitcoin with a clear set of live markers. Watch whether major miners sell less than they mine in the coming updates.
Watch whether difficulty continues to fall enough to restore healthier margins. Watch whether ETF flows strengthen into a steadier absorption channel.
Watch whether AI infrastructure becomes the preferred use of miner capital for the largest public operators. Those signals will reveal whether the sector is finally ending its capitulation phase and rebuilding treasuries, or whether the current cycle is moving into a different shape, one where miners remain important to Bitcoin’s supply side while their business incentives extend far beyond mining itself.
Right now, the evidence supports a sharp middle ground. Bitcoin miners are moving toward a classic washout milestone because the economics have become severe enough to force exits and trigger difficulty relief.
The accumulation restart that usually gives that milestone its real power has yet to show up across the biggest names in the sector. Until treasury sales slow in a visible way, the people producing new Bitcoin are still part of the pressure on the market, even as the conditions for a deeper reset begin to take form.
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