Ethereum Classic's Hashrate, Prices Surge as Miners Prepare for Post-Merge Reality

Futures tracking the tokens logged $27 million in liquidations in the past 24 hours – second only to ethereum and ahead of bitcoin futures.

AccessTimeIconSep 6, 2022 at 12:16 p.m. UTC
Updated May 11, 2023 at 4:43 p.m. UTC
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Ethereum Classic has emerged as an unlikely winner ahead of Ethereum’s Merge scheduled for later this month, with network metrics surging to lifetime highs and ETC tokens gaining value in a mostly flat market.

The Ethereum Classic hashrate reached over 48.64 terahashes per second (TH/s) as of Tuesday morning, having surged more than 133% since July and overtaking the previous record of 28 TH/s set in April. A terahash is a unit that indicates the power of a computer or mining machine. A high hashrate is considered an indicator of security because it makes it harder and more costly to take over the network.

ETC tokens have added 28% in the past 24 hours, rising to as high as $41 in early Asian trading hours before retreating slightly. Futures tracking the tokens logged $27 million in liquidations in the same period – second only to ether and ahead of bitcoin futures, which usually have the highest liquidations.

ETC prices saw a sudden surge in the past 24 hours. (TradingView)
ETC prices saw a sudden surge in the past 24 hours. (TradingView)

Why the sudden growth?

Ethereum Classic was formed after the DAO hack in 2016 caused a hard network fork that split the blockchain into two. The original chain continued as Ethereum Classic, while the new one was called Ethereum.

Ethereum went on to become the most-used blockchain in the world, locking up $110 billion in total value on various applications at its peak in 2021. Growth on Ethereum Classic, on the other hand, remained tepid. Applications based on the chain locked up just over $1 million at the peak, and the network didn't harbor any prominent decentralized finance (DeFi) application despite the sector’s outsized growth.

ETC prices did jump 10-fold during a two-month period in the 2021 bull market, but that movement came amid a speculative frenzy in the crypto market as opposed to solid fundamental growth.

What the bull market failed to ignite is now being catalyzed by the Merge instead. The Merge, which will shift Ethereum from its current proof-of-work (PoW) consensus mechanism to a proof-of-stake (PoS) one, has turned the focus of key network participants back to Ethereum Classic.

Developers say the move away from a proof-of-work system will make the network much cheaper and faster and environmentally friendly. It will also mean the end of an income stream for Ethereum miners, who are rewarded with ether tokens for supplying resources to the blockchain.

"Post-Ethereum Merge, the Ethereum PoW miners will need to mine other coins since Ethereum is moving to PoS," Hosam Mazawi, a co-founder at non-fungible token project Snook, wrote in a Telegram message. "The options are Ethereum Classic or some new Ethereum fork."

Miners produced over $620 million worth of ether in July alone, data shows, making the Merge akin to a death knell for a significant chunk of cash.

Still, it’s not a though Ethereum Classic will be without competition. A group of miners involved in 2016’s fork have floated their interest in forking Ethereum again after the Merge, creating ETHPOW, a token that would power the proof-of-work Ethereum network.

ETHPOW backers include Tron founder Justin Sun and prominent Chinese miner Chandler Guo. Sun has pledged more than 1 million ethers to help support and develop the chain.

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Shaurya Malwa

Shaurya is the Deputy Managing Editor for the Data & Tokens team, focusing on decentralized finance, markets, on-chain data, and governance across all major and minor blockchains.


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