Friday, November 21, 2025
DIGESTWIRE
Contribute
CONTACT US
  • Home
  • World
  • UK
  • US
  • Breaking News
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Health Care
  • Business
  • Sports
    • Sports
    • Cricket
    • Football
  • Defense
  • Crypto
    • Crypto News
    • Crypto Calculator
    • Coins Marketcap
    • Top Gainers and Loser of the day
    • Crypto Exchanges
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Blog
  • Founders
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • UK
  • US
  • Breaking News
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Health Care
  • Business
  • Sports
    • Sports
    • Cricket
    • Football
  • Defense
  • Crypto
    • Crypto News
    • Crypto Calculator
    • Coins Marketcap
    • Top Gainers and Loser of the day
    • Crypto Exchanges
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Blog
  • Founders
No Result
View All Result
DIGESTWIRE
No Result
View All Result
Home Blockchain

Are miners about to sell more Bitcoin? MARA’s record quarter says maybe

by DigestWire member
November 6, 2025
in Blockchain, Crypto Market, Cryptocurrency
0
Are miners about to sell more Bitcoin? MARA’s record quarter says maybe
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Marathon’s third-quarter filing carried a quiet but definitive policy change, in which the company stated that it will now sell a portion of newly mined Bitcoin (BTC) to fund its operations.

The shift occurred as MARA held approximately 52,850 BTC on Sept. 30, paid around $0.04 per kilowatt-hour at its owned sites, and recorded a purchased-energy cost per Bitcoin of around $39,235 in the third quarter as network difficulty increased.

Transaction fees contributed just 0.9% of mining revenue in the quarter, underlining weak fee tailwinds. Cash usage was heavy year-to-date, with approximately $243 million allocated to property and equipment, $216 million in advances to vendors, and a $36 million wind asset purchase, all of which were funded alongside $1.6 billion in financing.

Real capital expenditure and liquidity needs now coexist with lower hash economics.

The timing matters because pressures are building across the mining cohort, and the ingredients are in place for miners to add to the same sell-side impulse visible in ETF redemptions.

The effect is uneven across operators, but Marathon’s explicit pivot from pure accumulation to tactical monetization offers a template for what happens when margin squeeze meets elevated capital commitments.

Margin compression turns miners into active sellers

Industry profitability tightened in November. Hashprice fell to a multi-month low this week, at around $43.1 per petahash per second, as the Bitcoin price slid, fees remained subdued, and hashrate continued to climb.

That’s a classic margin squeeze pattern. Revenue per unit of hash falls while the denominator of competition rises, and fixed costs, such as power and debt service, remain constant.

For miners without access to cheap power or external financing, the path of least resistance is to sell a greater share of their production rather than holding and hoping for a price recovery.

The trade-off is treasury versus operations. Holding Bitcoin works when its appreciation outpaces the opportunity cost of selling to fund capital expenditures or service debt.

When the hash price falls below the cash cost plus capital needs, holding becomes a bet that the price recovers before liquidity runs out. Marathon’s policy shift signals that bets no longer pencil at current margins.

The vulnerability lies in the fact that if more miners follow the same logic, monetizing production to stay current on commitments, the aggregate flow to exchanges adds supply at exactly the moment ETF redemptions are already pulling demand.

How the operator landscape splits

Riot Platforms posted record revenue of $180.2 million for the third quarter, along with strong profitability, and it is initiating 112 megawatts of new data-center shell. It is a capital-intensive effort, but with balance-sheet options that can temper forced Bitcoin sales.

CleanSpark benchmarked marginal cost near the mid-$30,000s per Bitcoin from its fiscal first quarter disclosure and sold roughly 590 BTC in October for about $64.9 million in proceeds, while boosting treasury to around 13,033 BTC. That’s active treasury management without wholesale dumping.

Hut 8 reported revenue of roughly $83.5 million for the third quarter, along with positive net income, noting the mixed pressures across the cohort.

The divergence reflects power costs, financing access, and capital-allocation philosophy. Operators with power costs of less than $0.04 per kilowatt-hour and sufficient equity or debt capacity can weather margin compression without resorting to sales.

Those paying market rates for energy or carrying heavy near-term CapEx face a different calculus. The AI pivot cuts both ways for future sell pressure. New, long-dated compute contracts, such as IREN’s $9.7 billion deal with Microsoft over five years with a 20% prepay, paired with a $5.8 billion Dell equipment deal.

These contracts create non-Bitcoin revenue streams that can reduce reliance on coin sales. However, they also require significant near-term capital expenditures and working capital, and in the interim, treasury monetization remains a flexible lever.

Flow data corroborates the risk

CryptoQuant dashboards indicate that miner-to-exchange activity increased in mid-October and early November.

One widely cited data point indicates that roughly 51,000 BTC have been sent from miner wallets to Binance since Oct. 9. This doesn’t prove immediate selling, but it raises near-term supply overhang, and ETF context matters for scale.

CoinShares’ latest weekly report flagged approximately $360 million in net outflows from crypto ETPs, with Bitcoin products accounting for roughly $946 million in negative net inflows, while Solana saw strong inflows.

That Bitcoin figure equates to over 9,000 BTC at $104,000, equivalent to about three days of post-halving miner issuance. A week where public miners lean harder on sales can meaningfully add to the same tape.

The mechanical effect is that miners are selling compounds, and ETF redemption pressure during the same window. ETF outflows remove primary market demand, and miner exchange deposits add secondary market supply.

When both move in the same direction, the net effect is to tighten liquidity, which can accelerate price declines. These declines then loop back to compress miner margins further, triggering additional sales.

Breaking the feedback loop

The structural constraint is that miners can’t sell what they don’t mine, and daily issuance post-halving is capped.

At the current network hashrate, the total miner supply is roughly 450 BTC per day. Even if the entire cohort monetized 100% of production, which they won’t, the absolute flow is bounded.

The risk is concentration. If the largest holders decide to draw down the treasury rather than sell fresh production, the overhang grows.

Marathon’s 52,850 BTC, CleanSpark’s 13,033 BTC, and similar positions across Riot and Hut 8 represent months of accumulated issuance that could theoretically be released to exchanges if liquidity needs or strategic pivots dictate.

The second constraint is recovery speed. If the hash price and fee share rebound, either due to Bitcoin price appreciation or a mempool surge that increases transaction fees, miner economics can shift quickly.

Operators that held through the squeeze gain, and those that sold production at trough margins lock in losses. That asymmetry creates an incentive to avoid forced selling, but only if balance sheets can absorb the interim burn.

The stakes are whether margin compression and elevated capital commitments push enough miners into active selling to add to ETF redemption drag materially, or whether better-capitalized operators can finance through the squeeze without monetizing treasury.

Marathon’s explicit policy shift is the clearest signal yet that even large, well-funded miners are willing to sell production tactically when economics tighten.

If hash price and fee share remain depressed while power costs and CapEx outlays remain elevated, more miners will follow, especially those without access to cheap power or external financing.

Sustained miner exchange flows and any acceleration in treasury drawdowns should be treated as additive to outflow-driven weeks from ETFs.

If flows reverse and fees recover, the pressure eases quickly.

The post Are miners about to sell more Bitcoin? MARA’s record quarter says maybe appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Read Entire Article
Tags: BlockchainCoin SurgesCryptoslate
Share30Tweet19
Next Post
Time For A Cardano Reset? Crypto Pundit Claims Its DeFi Must Undergo Full Structural Overhaul

Time For A Cardano Reset? Crypto Pundit Claims Its DeFi Must Undergo Full Structural Overhaul

Trump unveils deal to lower prices for breakthrough weight-loss drugs

Trump unveils deal to lower prices for breakthrough weight-loss drugs

Southport killer’s parents ‘should be held to account’ over failures to stop son, say victims’ families

Southport killer's parents 'should be held to account' over failures to stop son, say victims' families

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

I agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

No Result
View All Result
Coins MarketCap Live Updates Coins MarketCap Live Updates Coins MarketCap Live Updates
ADVERTISEMENT

Highlights

South Africa’s first G20 faces challenges over exclusion of its oldest communities

Bitcoin Core Gets First-Ever Third-Party Security Audit: These Are The Results

Dogecoin Price Prediction: Will DOGE Recover in December or Fall Further First?

Ripple News: XRP Price Breaks Below $2 Amid ETF Race, Bitwise Trails Canary

Bitcoin won’t hit $200K until Q3 2029: Veteran trader Peter Brandt

Billionaire Ray Dalio Issues Dire Bubble Warning as Wealth Gaps and Fiscal Strain Deepen

Trending

‘Next Year’ Trailer: ‘Fellow Travelers’ Star Jaleni Alladin Tries to Survive a Near-Future U.S. Where Homosexuality Is Outlawed (EXCLUSIVE)
Entertainment

‘Next Year’ Trailer: ‘Fellow Travelers’ Star Jaleni Alladin Tries to Survive a Near-Future U.S. Where Homosexuality Is Outlawed (EXCLUSIVE)

by DigestWire member
November 21, 2025
0

“Next Year” may be resonating in more ways than the filmmakers originally imagined. A trailer for the...

Inside the Variety CMA Awards Lounge: Conversations With Shaboozey, the Red Clay Strays, Tucker Wetmore, the War & Treaty, Megan Moroney and More Stars

Inside the Variety CMA Awards Lounge: Conversations With Shaboozey, the Red Clay Strays, Tucker Wetmore, the War & Treaty, Megan Moroney and More Stars

November 21, 2025
Eros Innovation Secures $150 Million, Expands AI-Media Platform (EXCLUSIVE)

Eros Innovation Secures $150 Million, Expands AI-Media Platform (EXCLUSIVE)

November 21, 2025
South Africa’s first G20 faces challenges over exclusion of its oldest communities

South Africa’s first G20 faces challenges over exclusion of its oldest communities

November 21, 2025
Bitcoin Core Gets First-Ever Third-Party Security Audit: These Are The Results

Bitcoin Core Gets First-Ever Third-Party Security Audit: These Are The Results

November 21, 2025
DIGEST WIRE

DigestWire is an automated news feed that utilizes AI technology to gather information from sources with varying perspectives. This allows users to gain a comprehensive understanding of different arguments and make informed decisions. DigestWire is dedicated to serving the public interest and upholding democratic values.

Privacy Policy     Terms and Conditions

Recent News

  • ‘Next Year’ Trailer: ‘Fellow Travelers’ Star Jaleni Alladin Tries to Survive a Near-Future U.S. Where Homosexuality Is Outlawed (EXCLUSIVE) November 21, 2025
  • Inside the Variety CMA Awards Lounge: Conversations With Shaboozey, the Red Clay Strays, Tucker Wetmore, the War & Treaty, Megan Moroney and More Stars November 21, 2025
  • Eros Innovation Secures $150 Million, Expands AI-Media Platform (EXCLUSIVE) November 21, 2025

Categories

  • Blockchain
  • Blog
  • Breaking News
  • Business
  • Cricket
  • Crypto Market
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Defense
  • Entertainment
  • Football
  • Founders
  • Health Care
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Strange
  • Technology
  • UK News
  • Uncategorized
  • US News
  • World

© 2020-23 Digest Wire. All rights belong to their respective owners.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • UK
  • US
  • Breaking News
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Health Care
  • Business
  • Sports
    • Sports
    • Cricket
    • Football
  • Defense
  • Crypto
    • Crypto News
    • Crypto Calculator
    • Blockchain
    • Coins Marketcap
    • Top Gainers and Loser of the day
    • Crypto Exchanges
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Strange
  • Blog
  • Founders
  • Contribute!

© 2024 Digest Wire - All right reserved.

Privacy Policy   Terms and Conditions

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.