Bitcoin miners are preparing for a business model transformation that emphasizes blockchain infrastructure over speculative extraction, according to Abundant Mines CEO Beau Turner.
Summary
- Bitcoin long-term holders are showing early signs of selling at a loss, as the Long-Term Holder SOPR metric dipped below 1.0, signaling potential capitulation.
- Large holders have reduced positions at the fastest pace since early 2023, though the 30-day average LTH SOPR remains positive, suggesting some resilience.
- Analysts note mixed signals: while short-term holders near profitability and technical patterns hint at possible trend continuation, repeated resistance may limit immediate upside.
In an interview with TheStreet Roundtable, Turner stated that major mining operations are adjusting their strategies as the industry moves further into the post-halving era. “The biggest players in the industry are in many cases shifting their business models away from just a primary self mining business,” Turner said.
The executive indicated that future mining operations may increasingly focus on block space rather than block rewards. “You are going to probably see miners feel more like critical infrastructure businesses,” Turner stated. “We will be talking more about block space than block rewards.”
As Bitcoin adoption expands among governments, corporations and financial institutions, the available space on Bitcoin’s blockchain could become a scarce resource, Turner suggested. The CEO compared block space to strategic commodities such as metals or energy resources that nations seek to secure.
Turner projected that the professionalization of mining operations could reduce volatility in the sector’s traditional boom-and-bust cycles. “For the people who institutionalize and who professionalize, I think it is still going to be an incredibly lucrative industry for the next decade,” Turner said.
The Bitcoin halving is a programmed event that occurs approximately every four years, reducing the block reward paid to miners by 50 percent. The mechanism slows the creation of new bitcoin and maintains the network’s fixed supply cap of 21 million bitcoin.
The most recent halving occurred in April 2024, reducing the block reward from 6.25 bitcoin to 3.125 bitcoin per block. The next halving is expected in 2028, likely in April, depending on network block times. At that point, the block reward will decrease to 1.5625 bitcoin.
The halving mechanism is designed to gradually shift miner revenue from block subsidies toward transaction fees, according to Bitcoin’s protocol design.

