The founder of Capriole Investments has highlighted how Bitcoin is on the cusp of a zone that has historically offered the best long-term opportunities.
Bitcoin has returned to its production costs
In a new one after on X, Capriole Investments founder Charles Edwards has pointed out that Bitcoin is back at production costs. The ‘production cost’ here refers to an indicator that estimates the global average USD cost of producing one token of the cryptocurrency per day.
BTC uses a consensus mechanism called proof-of-work (PoW), where validators called miners compete with each other using computing power for the chance to add the next block to the chain.
Nowadays, the blockchain is so competitive that the average miner needs a lot of machines to have a chance at earning any income. Setting up mining operations can require a significant initial investment, but what determines whether the miner can earn an income is the costs required to keep these facilities running. Using a large amount of computing power is generally expensive, with the biggest costs coming in the form of electricity bills.
As the chart below, shared by Edwards, shows, the Bitcoin production cost is currently around $62,650.
This level is about wherever Bitcoin’s spot price is currently trading. So if the metric estimate is anything to go by, miners are simply breaking even on their operations.
Following this development, BTC now finds itself on the border of a zone that has been important for the cryptocurrency in the past. “The best long-term value opportunities have historically been between here and the cost of electricity, currently at $50,000,” the analyst noted. The ‘electrical costs’ here are the total costs that miners pay for electricity alone. This level has served as a kind of lower limit for Bitcoin throughout the various cycles.
Production costs suggest miners are currently under pressure. How do they respond to this? An indicator that can be useful for tracking miner behavior is the Hashrate, which tracks the total amount of computing power connected by these validators as a whole.
According to data from CoinWarzthis statistic has recently dropped.

The graph shows that the Bitcoin Hashrate currently has a value of approximately 837 exahashes per second (EH/s). In May, the indicator regularly reached the limit of 1,000 EH/s, more than 19% higher than the last level. So it appears that some miners have disconnected from the network in response to the bearish market.
BTC price
At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading around $62,400, down 9.5% in the past week.
