Bitcoin Miners Flood Binance as Exchange Inflows Hit Four-Month HighBitcoin miners significantly increased their transfers to Binance during June. Data suggests that the total miner inflows to the exchange have surpassed 150,000 BTC.
According to CryptoQuant, the figure marks the highest level of miner deposits to Binance in more than four months and points to a sharp rise in activity from wallets associated with mining operations.
Massive Miner Transfers
Miner inflows had remained relatively moderate in previous months before climbing sharply in June. The latest rise indicates that miners have become more active in moving their holdings to the exchange. This could reflect profit-taking after a period of price stability or efforts to secure liquidity to cover operational costs amid changing mining conditions and ongoing market volatility.
CryptoQuant explained that higher miner deposits do not automatically mean that all of the transferred Bitcoin will be sold immediately. However, the increase does place a larger amount of Bitcoin on the exchange, which increases the potential supply that could enter the market.
The analysis said that if these higher inflows are accompanied by weaker demand or lower buying activity, they could add selling pressure to Bitcoin prices. On the other hand, if the market absorbs the additional supply without a significant price decline, it could indicate strong demand and the ability of buyers to handle the increased supply.
At the same time, Alphractal’s Mining Equilibrium Index was at 0.75, which means that BTC miners are earning less than the annual average.
Bigger Story Behind Miner Pressures
The decline in mining profitability comes as several public mining companies have already reduced their Bitcoin holdings to cope with weaker economics and rising operating costs. But prominent independent analyst Shanaka Anslem Perera argued that these miners are not abandoning mining because the business has collapsed, but because artificial intelligence companies are offering far higher returns for the same energy infrastructure.
In a post on X, Perera said many publicly listed miners now face average production costs of around $80,000 per BTC. Some operations have become unprofitable when Bitcoin trades below that level. The downward difficulty adjustments this year indicated that some mining machines had already gone offline.
According to Perera, the major factor behind the industry’s shift is the growing demand for AI computing. He said a megawatt of electricity that generates roughly $1 million annually through Bitcoin mining can produce between $10 million and $20 million through AI hosting services. As a result, valuable assets such as power contracts, land, grid connections, and cooling infrastructure are increasingly being redirected toward AI operations.
Perera also added that Bitcoin’s network remains resilient because mining difficulty adjusts automatically when miners leave, which allows remaining participants to operate more profitably. He also said that the larger long-term issue is BTC’s dependence on block subsidies, which continue to decline through future halving events.
The post Bitcoin Miners Flood Binance as Exchange Inflows Hit Four-Month High appeared first on CryptoPotato.
read the full story
Bitcoin miners significantly increased their transfers to Binance during June. Data suggests that the total miner inflows to the exchange have surpassed 150,000 BTC.
According to CryptoQuant, the figure marks the highest level of miner deposits to Binance in more than four months and points to a sharp rise in activity from wallets associated with mining operations.
Massive Miner Transfers
Miner inflows had remained relatively moderate in previous months before climbing sharply in June. The latest rise indicates that miners have become more active in moving their holdings to the exchange. This could reflect profit-taking after a period of price stability or efforts to secure liquidity to cover operational costs amid changing mining conditions and ongoing market volatility.
CryptoQuant explained that higher miner deposits do not automatically mean that all of the transferred Bitcoin will be sold immediately. However, the increase does place a larger amount of Bitcoin on the exchange, which increases the potential supply that could enter the market.
The analysis said that if these higher inflows are accompanied by weaker demand or lower buying activity, they could add selling pressure to Bitcoin prices. On the other hand, if the market absorbs the additional supply without a significant price decline, it could indicate strong demand and the ability of buyers to handle the increased supply.
At the same time, Alphractal’s Mining Equilibrium Index was at 0.75, which means that BTC miners are earning less than the annual average.
Bigger Story Behind Miner Pressures
The decline in mining profitability comes as several public mining companies have already reduced their Bitcoin holdings to cope with weaker economics and rising operating costs. But prominent independent analyst Shanaka Anslem Perera argued that these miners are not abandoning mining because the business has collapsed, but because artificial intelligence companies are offering far higher returns for the same energy infrastructure.
In a post on X, Perera said many publicly listed miners now face average production costs of around $80,000 per BTC. Some operations have become unprofitable when Bitcoin trades below that level. The downward difficulty adjustments this year indicated that some mining machines had already gone offline.
According to Perera, the major factor behind the industry’s shift is the growing demand for AI computing. He said a megawatt of electricity that generates roughly $1 million annually through Bitcoin mining can produce between $10 million and $20 million through AI hosting services. As a result, valuable assets such as power contracts, land, grid connections, and cooling infrastructure are increasingly being redirected toward AI operations.
Perera also added that Bitcoin’s network remains resilient because mining difficulty adjusts automatically when miners leave, which allows remaining participants to operate more profitably. He also said that the larger long-term issue is BTC’s dependence on block subsidies, which continue to decline through future halving events.
The post Bitcoin Miners Flood Binance as Exchange Inflows Hit Four-Month High appeared first on CryptoPotato.
read the full storyBlackrock’s IBIT Leads $469 Million Bitcoin ETF Selloff in Biggest Exit Since June 2
Crypto exchange-traded fund (ETF) flows weakened sharply on Wednesday, June 24, as bitcoin ETFs…
“No Grifter Left Behind”: Ex-IMF Economist Reacts to Brutal Bitcoin and Crypto Selloff
TL;DR Former IMF economist Mark Dow renewed his criticism of Bitcoin after the latest crypto market…
Bitcoin options traders hedge downside as uncertainty lingers, Anchorage says
Anchorage Digital’s latest analysis shows Bitcoin options traders remain defensive as near-term…
Bitcoin may fall lower but BTC power-law frames crash to $58K as ‘normal’
Bitcoin’s drop to $58,000 lines up with the power-law model’s cycle lows, even though futures…
Invesco Files for Tokenized Stablecoin-Reserve Money Market Fund Built on Superstate Rails
US asset manager files for a GENIUS Act reserve money market fund whose shares are recorded directly…
Bitcoin Treasury Companies Are ‘Textbook Bubble Chart’ as MSTR Loses $100
Bitcoin treasury companies show textbook bubble signs as MSTR loses $100 support and STRC trades…
Aave Proposes Cross-Chain Deployment For Yield-Bearing sGHO Stablecoin
Aave governance is considering a cross-chain rollout for sGHO, using Chainlink CCIP to expand…
Bitcoin drop to $58K brings out bears: Is BTC’s next stop below $50K?
Bitcoin’s crash to $58,000 confirmed a bear flag breakdown, setting a new price target of $54,000…
Strategy's yield-generating STRC stock is more correlated with BTC than ever
The tightening correlation undermines STRC's appeal as a relatively steadier income vehicle.
Bitcoin Slides Nearly 20% in June as $715M in Crypto Long Bets Collapse
Bitcoin briefly plunged to a new year-to-date low of $58,035 on Thursday morning before staging a…
Ripple And SBI Launch RLUSD Stablecoin In Japan After Regulatory Approval
Ripple’s dollar-backed RLUSD stablecoin is now available in Japan through SBI VC Trade, adding a…
Bitcoin Drops to June Low as $1 Billion Liquidation Rocks Crypto Traders
Bitcoin hit its lowest point since early June. A brutal $1 billion wave of forced liquidations swept…
Ex-IMF Economist on Bitcoin (BTC) Crash: 'No Grifter Left Behind'
Former International Monetary Fund (IMF) economist and prominent macro trader Mark Dow has…
Traders Predict More Pain for Bitcoin and Ethereum After Monthly Drops Above 20%
Bitcoin touched its lowest price in 21 months early Thursday—and prediction market users don't see…
Bitcoin’s bear market struggle is killing crypto jobs but fueling a $10 billion Wall Street-backed M&A boom
Bitcoin’s prolonged decline is forcing cryptocurrency companies to cut staff, automate more work,…
Bitcoin Hits Multi‑Year Low With Derivatives Pointing to an Overcrowded Short Trade
TL;DR: Bitcoin dropped 5% over the last week, hitting $58,000, its lowest level since 2024, before…
'Bitcoin Is Not Dead': Veteran Trader Bob Loukas Reacts to Crypto Collapse With Bear Market Call
As Bitcoin drops to $59,307, analyst Bob Loukas warns that Bitcoin is not dead, but social media…
Former Fidelity Executive Says South Korean Index’s 10% Crash Pulled BTC Below $60,000
Mike McCluskey argues that bitcoin’s slide is due to its high-beta relationship with tech equities…
PCE Inflation Shakes Markets: Nasdaq Rally Collapses, Bitcoin Falls to New 2026 Low
Bitcoin price fell to $58,000 after hot May inflation dashed Fed rate-cut hopes, triggering $1.26…