Bitcoin hovering around miner economics is one of those moments people overlook.
Miners convert electricity and hardware into BTC. When price compresses toward their marginal production cost, weaker operators shut machines off, expansion slows, and the network does what it was designed to do: difficulty adjusts and the system rebalances.
There isn’t a single universal “cost to mine 1 BTC”; it varies by power rates, efficiency, and scale. But when market price leans into that zone, you often see miner stress, hash resets, and eventually a healthier equilibrium.
Translation: You’re interacting with Bitcoin at infrastructure-level economics, not hype-driven narrative.
It’s not literally buying a coin for the cost of a block, but historically, periods like this have marked high-conviction accumulation windows as the network purges excess and stabilizes.
Like picking up a Ferrari priced near its engine components. Rare territory.
Study the network. Understand the mechanics. Act accordingly.
Moon
mooncall@iris.to
npub1v45g...hj4a
Creative Thinker
All external expectations fall away in the face of death.
Remembering that you are going to die is the best way to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose.
You are already naked. Follow your heart.
Time is too valuable to give away.
No one wants to die. Not even Christians want to die to get to heaven.
Death is a beautiful part of life. It is life’s change agent to clear out the old into the new.
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