Asset management giant VanEck’s latest research report indicates that the current Bitcoin mining ecosystem is undergoing a dramatic adjustment. As hash rate suddenly declines, this previously perceived negative signal has actually been confirmed by historical data as a prelude to a bullish return. VanEck’s analysis points out that everything is unfolding according to established market laws.
Historical Laws Suddenly Manifest: How Hash Rate Decline Signals a Rebound
VanEck’s statistical data reveals an interesting market phenomenon. Since 2014, historical patterns show that when the total network hash rate of Bitcoin contracts, there is up to a 65% chance of positive returns within the following 90 days; in contrast, when hash rate continues to grow, the probability of positive returns is only 54%. Behind this seemingly subtle difference lies the code for market bottom formation.
VanEck analysts further note that this is a typical contrarian indicator. When hash rate plunges, it often signals a “miner capitulation”—that is, mining companies with weaker financial structures are forced to shut down due to falling coin prices and rising costs. Although this market “cleansing” appears pessimistic, historical experience confirms that it usually marks the arrival of a market bottom, often followed by a strong rebound.
Mining Profitability Plummets: Cost Pressure Forcing the Weak Out
In the current market environment, the mining industry is under unprecedented cost pressure. Taking the mainstream miner Antminer S19 XP as an example, its “break-even electricity price” (the maximum electricity cost a miner can bear while remaining profitable) has dropped from $0.12 per kWh at the end of 2024 to about $0.077 per kWh in mid-December, a decline of 36%. This means only large miners with low electricity costs and strong capital reserves can survive in the current market.
Data updated to January 2026 shows Bitcoin’s current price at $89.52K. As of mid-December, the total network hash rate has suddenly decreased by about 4%, marking the largest single-month drop since 2024. According to VanEck’s research, the longer the hash rate compression continues, the more intense the future rebound tends to be.
Institutional Accumulation Accelerates: Whales Make Large Monthly Buys
While miners are retreating, long-term institutional buyers are accelerating their deployment. VanEck’s tracking data shows that from mid-November to mid-December, crypto reserve companies bought approximately 42,000 Bitcoin, a monthly increase of about 4%, pushing their total holdings to around 1.09 million BTC.
More notably, this has become the largest single-month institutional accumulation since mid-year months (when monthly additions exceeded 128,000 Bitcoin). This reflects that long-term capital is strategically positioning itself within the window of miner exit.
Looking ahead, VanEck believes that these crypto reserve companies’ financing strategies will face adjustments. To raise more funds for Bitcoin purchases, these institutions will gradually reduce issuing common stock (to avoid equity dilution) and instead rely on preferred stock as the main financing tool. This shift reflects strong confidence in the future market and also hints that, amid miner capitulation, a genuine bull run may be brewing.
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Opportunities Behind Hash Rate Drop: VanEck Reveals Miner Surrender Rebound Signal
Asset management giant VanEck’s latest research report indicates that the current Bitcoin mining ecosystem is undergoing a dramatic adjustment. As hash rate suddenly declines, this previously perceived negative signal has actually been confirmed by historical data as a prelude to a bullish return. VanEck’s analysis points out that everything is unfolding according to established market laws.
Historical Laws Suddenly Manifest: How Hash Rate Decline Signals a Rebound
VanEck’s statistical data reveals an interesting market phenomenon. Since 2014, historical patterns show that when the total network hash rate of Bitcoin contracts, there is up to a 65% chance of positive returns within the following 90 days; in contrast, when hash rate continues to grow, the probability of positive returns is only 54%. Behind this seemingly subtle difference lies the code for market bottom formation.
VanEck analysts further note that this is a typical contrarian indicator. When hash rate plunges, it often signals a “miner capitulation”—that is, mining companies with weaker financial structures are forced to shut down due to falling coin prices and rising costs. Although this market “cleansing” appears pessimistic, historical experience confirms that it usually marks the arrival of a market bottom, often followed by a strong rebound.
Mining Profitability Plummets: Cost Pressure Forcing the Weak Out
In the current market environment, the mining industry is under unprecedented cost pressure. Taking the mainstream miner Antminer S19 XP as an example, its “break-even electricity price” (the maximum electricity cost a miner can bear while remaining profitable) has dropped from $0.12 per kWh at the end of 2024 to about $0.077 per kWh in mid-December, a decline of 36%. This means only large miners with low electricity costs and strong capital reserves can survive in the current market.
Data updated to January 2026 shows Bitcoin’s current price at $89.52K. As of mid-December, the total network hash rate has suddenly decreased by about 4%, marking the largest single-month drop since 2024. According to VanEck’s research, the longer the hash rate compression continues, the more intense the future rebound tends to be.
Institutional Accumulation Accelerates: Whales Make Large Monthly Buys
While miners are retreating, long-term institutional buyers are accelerating their deployment. VanEck’s tracking data shows that from mid-November to mid-December, crypto reserve companies bought approximately 42,000 Bitcoin, a monthly increase of about 4%, pushing their total holdings to around 1.09 million BTC.
More notably, this has become the largest single-month institutional accumulation since mid-year months (when monthly additions exceeded 128,000 Bitcoin). This reflects that long-term capital is strategically positioning itself within the window of miner exit.
Future Outlook: Institutional Financing Strategies Shift
Looking ahead, VanEck believes that these crypto reserve companies’ financing strategies will face adjustments. To raise more funds for Bitcoin purchases, these institutions will gradually reduce issuing common stock (to avoid equity dilution) and instead rely on preferred stock as the main financing tool. This shift reflects strong confidence in the future market and also hints that, amid miner capitulation, a genuine bull run may be brewing.