The aforementioned fall in hashrate increased the average time taken for one block generation from 7.5 minutes to over 13 minutes.
At the same time, the mining difficulty has not yet re-adjusted and was noted to be at 16.105 Trillion. The rising mining difficulty, combined with dropping hash rate, suggested that inefficient miners were dropping out of the network. The hash rate may recover in time, but before that, it will replace inefficient operations with efficient miners, noted crypto-data analytics platform – CoinMetrics.
Further, due to the block reward halving, miners’ revenue fell from $17.168 million on 11 May to $7.823 million on 13 May. However, this sharp dive was followed by an upward rising curve, one noted on 14 May. According to data provided by Blockchain.com, miners’ revenue rose to $8.245 million on 14 May.
This value was a total of Coinbase block rewards and transaction fees paid to miners. The transaction fees have also noted a rise of no less than 15%.
Other impacts of halving were noted on Bitcoin’s inflation rates and its annual issuance. According to data provided by CoinMetrics, BTC inflation experienced its first-ever day with issuance below an annualized rate of 1.5% on 13 May. On the contrary, its annual issuance that was once in line with Ethereum’s over the past year, was noted to be about 1/3rd of ETH, at the time of writing.
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