Bitcoin miners just moved $5.6B to exchanges under AI escape plan

Bitcoin miners are running out of room to breathe.

In the wake of a $19 billion market rout, operators have begun moving massive volumes of Bitcoin onto exchanges, a classic signal that sell pressure is building.

Data from CryptoQuant shows that between Oct. 9 and Oct. 15, mining wallets sent 51,000 BTC, worth more than $5.6 billion, to Binance alone. The largest daily transfer, over 14,000 BTC on Oct. 11, marked the biggest miner deposit since July 2024.

Bitcoin Miners Transfers to Exchanges
Bitcoin Miners Transfers to Exchanges (Source: CryptoQuant)

Selling the reserves

Such spikes rarely happen in isolation. They usually appear when miners need liquidity to cover rising costs or hedge against price swings.

Analysts view these movements as a bearish on-chain signal, showing that miners are exiting long-term accumulation phases and preparing to sell.

Blockchain researcher ArabChain explained that large transfers from miner wallets typically indicate either direct liquidation or preparations for collateralized borrowing.

According to the researcher:

“Sometimes, miners also deposit coins to use as collateral for derivatives contracts or for financing purposes. In some cases, these deposits are merely technical reallocations—i.e., transfers between wallets associated with mining entities and trading platforms for regulatory or operational reasons.”

That change in behavior marks a turning point for the industry. For much of this year, miners were consistent net accumulators, banking on post-halving scarcity to drive prices higher.

However, they are now reacting to the opposite as shrinking margins and intensifying network difficulty drive their margin low.

A tougher race to every block

Bitcoin mining difficulty, which measures how hard it is to find a new block, peaked above 150 trillion in September after seven consecutive positive adjustments.

According to Cloverpool data, the most recent epoch, ending at block 919,296, finally eased by 2.73%, offering brief relief after months of relentless upward pressure.

Difficulty adjustments happen roughly every two weeks, recalibrating the puzzle to ensure blocks arrive near Bitcoin’s ten-minute target.

A rising difficulty signals that more machines compete for rewards; a decline shows weaker miners have powered down. But even a slight drop hasn’t improved profitability.

According to Hashrate Index, hashprice, the revenue per terahash of computing power, has fallen to around $45, the lowest since April.

Meanwhile, transaction fees, which should help offset lower rewards, have cratered instead. So far in 2025, the average fee per block has been 0.036 BTC, the weakest since 2010.

Bitcoin Average Block Fees
Bitcoin Average Block Fees (Source: Hashlabs)

Bitcoin mining analyst Jaran Mellerund said:

“It is a paradox that so many bitcoin miners completely disregard transaction fees. Nobody seems to even talk about them…In just a decade, these fees will be almost your sole source of income.”

With Bitcoin’s halving in April cutting block rewards to 3.125 BTC, miners are now competing in a zero-sum environment where every extra terahash of power reduces everyone’s payout.

Many smaller operations are already underwater, particularly those running older, less efficient rigs.

AI presents a lifeline

Faced with razor-thin margins, major mining firms are discovering a lucrative alternative in AI and high-performance computing (HPC) hosting.

Over the past year, companies such as Core Scientific have retooled their massive data center footprints, which are already optimized for power, cooling, and fiber connectivity, to accommodate compute-hungry AI workloads.

Hashlabs reported that a 1-megawatt (MW) mining site operating efficient rigs at around 20 joules per terahash (J/TH) can generate about $896,000 in Bitcoin revenue annually at a BTC price of $100,000.

However, the same MW rented to AI clients for compute-intensive workloads can yield up to $1.46 million yearly in stable, contract-based income.

AI Data Center Constructions
AI Data Center Constructions (Source: Nico Smid)

Nico Smid, founder of Digital Mining Solutions, said:

“The rise of AI and high-performance computing (HPC) is transforming the global compute landscape and Bitcoin miners are feeling the impact firsthand. What started as parallel industries are now competing for the same critical resources: power, infrastructure, people, and capital.”

This pivot doesn’t mean miners are abandoning Bitcoin. Instead, they’re diversifying the same infrastructure that once secured the blockchain into a broader computing economy.

In practice, miners can remain solvent through hosting contracts while waiting for the next crypto upcycle.

What it means for Bitcoin

The short-term read is clear that miner selling adds pressure to an already fragile market.

Historically, sustained inflows from miner wallets have preceded periods of consolidation or capitulation. But the longer-term story may prove more consequential.

If mining facilities continue morphing into hybrid AI-crypto data centers, Bitcoin’s security model, which depends on consistent hashpower incentives, could face structural change.

As profitability from pure block rewards declines, Bitcoin’s hash rate may increasingly depend on firms whose primary business is no longer mining alone.

The post Bitcoin miners just moved $5.6B to exchanges under AI escape plan appeared first on CryptoSlate.

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