The Bitcoin difficulty per issuance, a proof-of-work (PoW) pricing model, might provide hints about the following crucial level BTC would have to clear.
Bitcoin Approaches Difficulty Per Issuance Model 2.0 Level
As pointed out by an analyst on Twitter, the BTC price is almost double the cost of production now. The “difficulty per issuance” is a Bitcoin PoW pricing model based on two metrics: the mining difficulty and the issuance.
The mining difficulty is a mechanism of the Bitcoin network that sets the computing difficulty for miners to mint new coins and insert blocks on the chain. The difficulty exists because the BTC network was configured to keep its supply production around a constant value.
Whenever the Bitcoin hashrate, a measure of the total amount of computing power connected to the blockchain, changes its value, the rate at which miners produce new blocks also fluctuates. As the network is set to prevent this, it adjusts the difficulty exactly as much as is needed to counter these fluctuations.
Because the difficulty is dependent on the hashrate in this way, it encapsulates all the mining-related expenses that miners incur and can thus be used to estimate production costs.
The difficulty per issuance model is based on this idea. To calculate the cost of 1 BTC, the model divides the difficulty term with the “issuance,” the total amount of new coins added to the circulating supply.
Now, here is a chart that shows the three essential levels of this model and where Bitcoin stands in relation to them:
The three difficulty per issuance pricing levels | Source: @paulewaulpaul on Twitter
As displayed in the above graph, the Bitcoin price was under the difficulty per issuance 1.41 level a while back (the middle line). This level represents a kind of average cost of production for the BTC miners.
The bottom line gives a lower bound estimation for the cost of production, while the top line gives an upper bound. The chart…