Setting the Scene
Bitcoin’s fourth halving occurred on 20 April 2024 at block height 840,000, reducing the block subsidy from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC. By the time the event arrived, it had been anticipated so thoroughly — discussed in analyst notes, priced into options markets, and dissected across thousands of hours of podcast content — that the immediate price reaction was, in a word, anticlimactic. Bitcoin traded sideways around $63,000 for several days before eventually drifting lower.
The absence of an immediate spike disappointed some retail participants who had positioned for a pop. It should not have surprised anyone who had studied the previous three cycles carefully. In 2016, the halving was followed by six weeks of price stagnation before the eventual bull market began. The pattern in 2020 was similar: a muted immediate reaction, followed by a multi-month accumulation phase, and then a sharp move higher.
Six months on from the 2024 halving, the data is clearer. This piece examines what actually happened across several key metrics: miner economics, hash rate, exchange balances, and price action — and what it implies for the trajectory ahead.
Miner Economics: Stress, Adaptation, and Consolidation
The immediate economic impact of the halving on miners was significant. Revenue per unit of hash rate (commonly measured as hash price) roughly halved overnight. Miners operating with older generation ASICs or high electricity costs faced a stark choice: upgrade hardware, renegotiate power contracts, or shut down.
In the weeks following the halving, Bitcoin’s network hash rate declined approximately 5 to 7 percent from its all-time high — a relatively modest correction compared to the 40 to 50 percent hash rate declines seen after the 2020 halving. The difference reflects the substantial efficiency improvements in mining hardware over the intervening four years, and the increasing sophistication of large-scale mining operations in managing their cost structures.
Miner selling behaviour, tracked through on-chain flows from known mining wallets to exchanges, showed an initial spike in the two weeks following the halving as less efficient operations liquidated to cover costs. This selling pressure was absorbed relatively cleanly by the market, partly because the ETF inflows that had dominated the first quarter of 2024 had created a large and willing buyer base. By June, miner outflows had normalised to levels consistent with ongoing operational needs rather than stress selling.
The longer-term consequence of the halving for mining is structural consolidation. Publicly listed miners have continued to raise equity capital, upgrade hardware, and expand capacity. The economics increasingly favour scale: large operations with access to cheap renewable energy and the balance sheet to weather periods of thin margins will continue to take share from smaller, higher-cost competitors. This consolidation trend has implications for mining decentralisation that deserve ongoing scrutiny.
Exchange Balances: A Structural Decline Continues
One of the more striking on-chain trends of the post-halving period has been the continued decline in Bitcoin held on centralised exchanges. Exchange balances peaked in early 2021 at approximately 3.1 million BTC and have been declining steadily since. By October 2024, the figure sits around 2.3 million BTC — a reduction of roughly 800,000 coins, worth approximately $50 billion at current prices.
This decline reflects several overlapping dynamics. Some Bitcoin has moved to cold storage by long-term holders who have no intention of selling. Some has moved into ETF custodial wallets — the spot ETFs collectively hold approximately 900,000 BTC as of mid-2024, the majority of which is custodied by Coinbase and is therefore not on the traditional exchange order books in the same way. Some reflects improved self-custody practices following the FTX collapse.
The supply-side implication is that the effective float of Bitcoin available for trading is smaller than the nominal exchange balance suggests. This concentration of supply in illiquid hands is a structural factor that tends to amplify price moves in both directions: when demand increases, there are fewer coins available at prevailing prices, and price must move higher to attract supply from less-motivated holders. When demand falls sharply, the same thin float can amplify downside moves.
Price Action: Consolidation, Then What?
Bitcoin’s price trajectory in the six months following the April 2024 halving can be characterised as a broad consolidation between $55,000 and $72,000, punctuated by two sharp but short-lived sell-offs — one in late April driven by Middle East geopolitical tensions, and one in August tied to a broader risk asset correction following the unwinding of yen carry trades.
Both sell-offs recovered within two to four weeks, consistent with the pattern of previous cycles where post-halving consolidation phases have been characterised by lower highs followed by higher lows. The accumulation profile — long-term holder balances growing, short-term holder balances declining, exchange outflows continuing — is also consistent with historical pre-bull-run setups.
Whether the pattern holds in the 2024-2025 cycle is, of course, uncertain. The presence of large ETF flows as a new structural demand factor is genuinely unprecedented, and its interaction with the traditional halving cycle dynamics is not yet fully understood. What the six-month data shows is that the post-halving phase has not broken from historical precedent in any dramatic way — which, on balance, is a mildly constructive signal for the period ahead.
Conclusion
Six months after the halving, the on-chain and market data paint a picture of orderly adjustment rather than disruption. Miners have adapted, exchange balances continue to trend lower, and price has held within a consolidation range that historical precedent suggests precedes more significant moves.
None of this is a guarantee of future performance. But for traders and investors who anchor their framework in the data rather than the narrative, the post-halving evidence so far is largely consistent with what the previous three cycles suggested it would be.


