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Bitcoin Mining Difficulty Surges to All-Time High, Putting Additional Squeeze on Miners

The difficulty gauge rose 13.55% from the last adjustment roughly two weeks ago, the largest such move since May 2021.

AccessTimeIconOct 10, 2022 at 12:25 p.m. UTC
Updated Oct 14, 2022 at 5:55 p.m. UTC

Oliver Knight is a CoinDesk reporter based between London and Lisbon. He does not own any crypto.

The latest difficultly adjustment is in and it now stands at 35.6 trillion, up a whopping 13.55% from the previous measure, according data from btc.com.

Part of the Bitcoin code includes a so-called difficulty adjustment every 2,016 blocks (about every two weeks). The size and direction of the adjustment depends on the total computing power mining bitcoin, and its purpose is to keep block confirmations coming about every 10 minutes.

The current network hash rate is 257 million terahashes per second (TH/s), according to blockchain.com, a significant rise from this time last year when it was at around 140 million TH/s.

Rising difficulty paints an even drearier picture for bitcoin miners who are already feeling the squeeze of weak bitcoin prices and higher energy costs.

To name two recent examples, London-based miner Argo Blockchain (ARBK) was forced to raise $27 million last week to ease liquidity pressures, and mining data center provider Compute North filed for bankruptcy.

"Our profitability has been squeezed from both sides from higher energy prices to lower bitcoin price, that's resulted in a cash crunch for Argo," said Argo Blockchain CEO Peter Wall.

Bitcoin continues to hover in a very tight trading range around the low-$19,000 area. The price at press time was $19,333.

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Oliver Knight is a CoinDesk reporter based between London and Lisbon. He does not own any crypto.

CoinDesk - Unknown

Oliver Knight is a CoinDesk reporter based between London and Lisbon. He does not own any crypto.