Bitcoin hash rate has been performing exceptionally this year. Miners around the world clearly see a bright future for the leading crypto asset.
The same cannot be said for other big projects in the industry. Whereas Bitcoin just hit a new all-time high hash rate, the likes of Ethereum, Bitcoin Cash and SV, and Litecoin have seen no such dramatic uptake in computing power deployed on their networks.Hash Rates Point to a Growth in Bitcoin Dominance in 2020
Despite Bitcoin prices experiencing a rocky second half of 2019, miners are still clearly investing big to secure the network. The hash rate of the leading crypto asset just hit a new of more than 110 exahashes per second.This year has been a particularly strong one for Bitcoin’s hash rate. It has trended up hard, setting new all-time highs on numerous occasions. Mining equipment operators seem to have ignored the fact that the price has been trending down since July.
The surging hash rate is the result of new, more efficient hardware hitting the market, as well as major mining operations starting up around the world. Although China has increased its overall dominance of Bitcoin’s hashing power, large new operations coming to Russia, and the US look set to somewhat redress the balance in the new year.
//twitter.com/WhiteRabbitBTC/status/10093568Demanding huge amounts of electricity and sophisticated computer hardware, Bitcoin mining is an expensive business. The soaring hash rate shows that miners are willing to spend big competing for the Bitcoin rewarded with every new block added to the blockchain.
If Bitcoin’s hash rate shows miner confidence in the future of the currency, those of other leading crypto assets tell a somewhat different story. As pointed out by analyst WhiteRabbit (@WhiteRabbitBTC), computing power deployed on the respective networks has seen no major uptake and in one case has even declined dramatically. After a surge around the end of November 2018, likely relating to the “hash war” between the two currencies, Bitcoin Cash and Bitcoin SV saw a mass exodus of miners. The former has since increased in hash rate at a much more measured pace than Bitcoin (BTC), and the latter has seen no real uptake in miner interest.Related Reading: Bitcoin Price Will Drop $1,000 Before Seeing Real Bottom: Here’s Why
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