The Miner Cycle Stress Composite, an on-chain indicator cited by CryptoQuant contributor gaah_im, has fallen to a new 2026 low and entered its “undervalued” range. The gauge combines the Puell Multiple, which compares current miner revenue with historical revenue trends, and an inverse miner capitulation measure designed to capture operational stress across the mining network.
The signal matters because miners are among Bitcoin’s most cyclical participants. They earn revenue in BTC but pay most of their costs, including electricity, hosting, debt service and equipment purchases, in fiat currency. When Bitcoin’s price weakens, transaction fees fall or network difficulty stays elevated, miner margins compress quickly. Higher-cost operators may then be forced to shut down machines, sell coins, restructure debt or delay expansion.
Historically, sharp declines in miner profitability and rising capitulation pressure have appeared near major Bitcoin cycle lows, including 2015, 2018, 2020, 2022 and 2024. The current reading has drawn attention because the composite is showing a level of stress rarely seen across Bitcoin’s history.
Rare Signal, Not a Simple Buy Indicator
The comparison with previous cycle lows is important, but it should not be treated as a mechanical bullish signal. Bitcoin’s market structure in 2026 is very different from earlier cycles. Spot Bitcoin ETFs, institutional custody, public mining companies, derivatives liquidity and corporate treasury buyers now influence flows in ways that did not exist during the 2015 miner capitulation period.
Still, the reading suggests that the mining sector is under unusual pressure relative to recent history. That pressure has also been visible in network data. Bitcoin mining difficulty fell 10.09% at block 953,568 in June, dropping from 138.96 trillion to 124.93 trillion. It was one of the largest downward difficulty adjustments in Bitcoin’s history and showed that enough hashpower had left the network to slow block production during the prior adjustment period.
A difficulty decline can help surviving miners by reducing competition for block rewards, but it usually follows a period of acute stress. It indicates that weaker or higher-cost operators have already begun switching off machines, either because they are unprofitable or because cash flow has deteriorated.
Hashprice Pressure Drives Miner Capitulation
Hashprice remains the clearest measure of miner economics because it reflects expected revenue per unit of computing power. When hashprice falls, miners earn less for the same amount of hashrate. That is especially painful after Bitcoin’s latest halving, which reduced the block subsidy and made transaction fees a more important source of marginal revenue.
Reports in June showed hashprice falling below levels that make older mining machines uneconomic, particularly for operators without access to cheap power. CoinShares previously estimated that 15% to 20% of the global mining fleet was unprofitable at depressed hashprice levels, with mid-generation machines requiring power below roughly $0.05 per kilowatt-hour to remain cash profitable.
The stress is widening the gap between efficient and inefficient miners. Operators with low energy costs, newer fleets and strong balance sheets can survive difficult periods and potentially gain market share. Weaker miners may need to sell Bitcoin, curtail operations or raise capital on unfavorable terms.
For Bitcoin investors, the signal is double-edged. Historically rare miner stress has often appeared near long-term accumulation zones, but it can also coincide with short-term volatility if miners sell reserves to cover costs. The key question is whether ETF demand, long-term holders and corporate buyers can absorb that supply before miner profitability normalizes.
Until hashprice recovers or difficulty adjusts further, miner stress is likely to remain one of Bitcoin’s most important on-chain indicators.