Bitcoin Mining Profitability Is Stuck at Record Lows, JPMorgan Says
Miners earned an average of $43,600 per exahash a second in daily block rewards last month, the lowest rate on record, the report said.
- Bitcoin mining profitability is at a record low, the report said.
- The aggregate market cap of the U.S.-listed bitcoin miners tracked by the bank fell 15% last month, JPMorgan said.
- The bank noted that mining difficulty rose 9% from the previous month.
Bitcoin
"We estimate bitcoin miners earned an average of $43,600 per EH/s in daily block reward revenue in August, the lowest point on record," analysts Reginald Smith and Charles Pearce wrote.
That compares with a peak value of $342,000 in November 2021, when the BTC price was $60,000 and the network hashrate was 161 EH/s.
Mining stocks declined as the average price of the world's largest cryptocurrency fell for the third consecutive month and the network hashrate rose. Hashrate refers to the total combined computational power used to mine and process transactions on a proof-of-work blockchain.
The total market cap of the 14 U.S.-listed miners tracked by the bank shrank 15% month-on-month to $20 billion, with only three of the miners outperforming bitcoin in the period, the report said.
The network hashrate, a proxy for competition in the industry and mining difficulty, increased for the second straight month, the bank noted. "The network hashrate averaged 631 EH/s in August, up 16 EH/s from last month, and about 20 EH/s below prehalving levels," the authors wrote.
JPMorgan noted that mining difficulty rose 9% last month, and is 4% higher than before the halving.
There was a brief spike in transaction fees in August, to as much as 120% of the block reward, which is an "incremental positive" for the miners, the report added.
The bank noted that bitcoin's annualized volatility rose to 62% in August, from 45% in July.
Read more: Bitcoin Mining Opportunity Is Worth About $74B, JPMorgan Says
More For You
BlackRock exec says 1% crypto allocation in Asia could unlock $2 trillion in new flows

During a panel discussion at Consensus in Hong Kong, Peach pointed to massive capital pools in traditional finance as ETF adoption spreads across Asia.
What to know:
- Even a 1% crypto allocation in standard portfolios across Asia could translate into nearly $2 trillion of inflows, highlighting how modest shifts in asset allocation could transform the digital asset market, according to the head of APAC iShares at BlackRock, Nicholas Peach.
- BlackRock's iShares unit, whose U.S.-listed spot Bitcoin ETF IBIT has rapidly grown to about $53 billion in assets, is seeing strong demand from Asian investors as ETF adoption accelerates across the region.
- Regulators in markets such as Hong Kong, Japan and South Korea are moving toward broader crypto ETF offerings, but industry leaders say investor education and portfolio strategy will be critical to channeling traditional finance capital into digital assets.












