Post-Halving Twist: Why Bitcoins Actual Supply May Be Lower Than Expected

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Bitcoin has reclaimed significant ground after a steep correction earlier this month, now trading above $93,000. The cryptocurrency is currently priced at $94,014, reflecting a 5% increase over the past 24 hours and more than 20% in gains over the last two weeks.

This price level marks a renewed effort to recover from the recent drop that saw BTC reach as low as $74,000, placing attention on both market sentiment and underlying network behavior.

With renewed interest in Bitcoin following last year’s Halving event, a CryptoQuant analyst has revealed interesting insights on BTC’s mining dynamics.

CryptoQuant contributor Carmelo Alemn has presented new insights into Bitcoins block issuance and total daily mining output, revealing a gap between theoretical assumptions and real-world data.

His observations suggest that while Bitcoins block schedule is largely predictable, on-chain measurements may provide a more accurate view of post-Halving supply behavior.

According to Bitcoins protocol, one block is expected to be mined every 10 minutes. Following the April Halving last year, the reward for each block was reduced from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC.

This would imply that approximately 144 blocks are produced daily, leading to an estimated 450 BTC entering circulation each day (3.125 BTC 144 blocks). However, Alemns analysis indicates that the actual number of newly mined coins is often lower than this theoretical estimate.

By using the Bitcoin: Total Supply metric from CryptoQuant with daily resolution, Alemn examined the actual change in circulating supply and found discrepancies between the expected output and on-chain reality.

These variances may result from slower-than-average block times, network difficulty adjustments, or temporary congestion within the mining ecosystem. While the Bitcoin protocol maintains a ten-minute block target, real-world mining activity does not always align with that schedule precisely on a daily basis.

The significance of Alemns findings lies in their implication for how Bitcoin supply is tracked and understood by investors, miners, and analysts. Instead of relying solely on theoretical projections based on protocol rules, on-chain metrics provide a view of actual blockchain activity.

These insights can help refine market models, particularly during transitional periods such as post-halving adjustments. The halving event, which reduced the block reward by 50%, is designed to limit Bitcoins inflation rate and enforce its fixed supply cap.

However, Alemns data suggests that monitoring total supply growth through blockchain records offers a more granular understanding of how much BTC is entering circulation on a day-to-day basis. This can influence market supply-demand calculations and even miner profitability estimates.

Featured image created with DALL-E, Chart from TradingView

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