Key Takeaways
Bitcoin miners were in a relatively healthy position and don’t need to panic sell their holdings, but August saw a quick decrease in the supply held by miners.
Bitcoin’s [BTC] mining difficulty reached a new all-time high on the 6th of September. The mining difficulty refers to the average difficulty for mining a block in the network. It set an all-time high of 136 trillion.

Source: Blockchain.com
The mean hash rate has dipped slightly to rest at 948.3 billion hashes per second on the 6th of September, according to Glassnode data.
The all-time high for the hashrate stands at over 1 trillion, registered on the 4th of August.
Higher difficulty and increasing hash rate are good for the security of the network. They also mean conditions are getting tougher for miners.
This has been the case for many years, and explains the rise of mining pools and large corporations in Bitcoin mining.
Bitcoin miners forced to sell as network demand weakens
Alphractal founder Joao Wedson explained that the mining sector showed signs of instability in 2025, though BTC prices were elevated compared to 2017 or 2021.
He observed that the Mining Equilibrium Index remained within neutral to bullish territory.
The miner net position change saw a sharp dip into negative territory toward the end of August, which indicated selling pressure from miners.
However, as AMBCrypto reported earlier, the Puell Multiple reflected a healthy mining environment.
Even though operational costs are rising, the selling witnessed is strategic in nature and not anywhere near capitulation levels, as the generated income was enough to sustain daily operations.
In a post on X, crypto analyst Axel Adler Jr observed that the miner demand-supply balance was at a relatively healthy 60%.
The metric measures the balance of network demand (fees) against the new supply (issuance x price).
The 60% reading showed that activity and fees were enough not to amplify sell pressure from miners, reinforcing AMBCrypto’s earlier findings.
However, demand was down 6% from the ATH, which gives a neutral-bullish backdrop for miners.
Despite the rising difficulty and associated operational costs, it remained likely that miners would not be forced to capitulate, based on the Miner Equilibrium Index.
The miner net position change has drifted upward over the past week, and the spike in selling in the third week of August has been decreasing.