Pro Charts

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Bitcoin

A transaction is a transfer of Bitcoin value that is broadcast to the network and collected into blocks. A transaction typically references previous transaction outputs as new transaction inputs and dedicates all input Bitcoin values to new outputs. Transactions are not encrypted, so it is possible to browse and view every transaction ever collected into a block. Once transactions are buried under enough confirmations they can be considered irreversible. Chart uses 7-day moving average.

A transaction is a transfer of Bitcoin value that is broadcast to the network and collected into blocks. A transaction typically references previous transaction outputs as new transaction inputs and dedicates all input Bitcoin values to new outputs. Transactions are not encrypted, so it is possible to browse and view every transaction ever collected into a block. Once transactions are buried under enough confirmations they can be considered irreversible.

The number of unique addresses that were active in the network either as a sender or receiver. Only addresses that were active in successful transactions are counted. Chart uses 7-day moving average.

The monthly sum over the daily number of unique addresses that were active in the network either as a sender or receiver. Only addresses that were active in successful transactions are counted.

The number of unique addresses that appeared for the first time in a transaction of the native coin in the network. Chart uses 7-day moving average.

Transaction volume is a measure of the economic throughput of BTC on the Bitcoin blockchain.

Transaction volume is a measure of the economic throughput of BTC on the Bitcoin blockchain.

Miner revenue takes into account inflation rewards (block subsidy) and transaction fees. Miners are paid rewards in the blockchain's native currency, which is bitcoin, for producing valid blocks and processing transactions.

Miner revenue takes into account inflation rewards (block subsidy) and transaction fees. Miners are paid rewards in the blockchain's native currency, which is bitcoin, for producing valid blocks and processing transactions.

Daily miner revenue divided by TH/s for the Bitcoin network. This metric trends down over time, but shifts from trendline indicate more / less profitable periods for miners (due to increasing bitcoin prices, transaction fees, or favorable difficulty adjustments). Chart uses 7-day moving average.

Daily transaction fees divided by the number of transactions made on the Bitcoin blockchain. Chart uses 7-day moving average.

The percentage of circulating supply in profit, i.e. the percentage of existing coins whose price at the time they last moved was lower than the current price.

Bitcoin addresses with over $X BTC.

Percentage of Bitcoin supply that has been active within X time period.

The Lightning Network aims to provide an accessible way for users to engage in off-chain payments quickly and reliably by adding another layer to the Bitcoin blockchain. Lightning is constructed on the notion of payment channels, which allow two parties lock up on-chain funds in the channel to transact without pushing their transactions to the blockchain. Each party can send a net value of up to the initial amount locked on their side of the channel. This chart graphs the total sum of balances available across all lightning payment channels, also known as the Channel capacity.

Mining hashrate is a key security metric. The more hashing (computing) power in the network, the greater its security and its overall resistance to attack. Although Bitcoin’s exact hashing power is unknown, it is possible to estimate it from the number of blocks being mined and the current block difficulty.

Hashprice, a term coined by Luxor, refers to the expected value of 1 TH/s of hashing power per day. The metric quantifies how much a miner can expect to earn from a specific quantity of hashrate.

Hashprice is a function of four inputs: network difficulty, Bitcoin’s price, block subsidy and transaction fees. Bitcoin’s hashprice will change with every new block added to the blockchain. Luxor's Bitcoin Hashprice Index uses a 144 lagging SMA to account for transaction fees.

Hashprice is positively correlated with changes to Bitcoin’s price and transaction fee volume and negatively correlated with changes to Bitcoin’s mining difficulty.

The ASIC Price Index reflects the current price per TH of different Bitcoin mining ASICs grouped by three efficiency tiers.

Luxor calculates the ASIC Price Index by averaging each unit price based on its nominal hashrate output. They group together different ASIC models into different efficiency tiers based on their power efficiency and display each efficiency in terms of $ per TH. Each Bitcoin mining ASIC listing they use in the index is vetted through a confidence interval using previous index values and our proprietary algorithm.

The three efficiency tiers:

- Under 38 joules/TH (38 J/TH) includes the latest generation Bitcoin mining ASICs like Bitmain’s Antminer S19, S19j and S19 Pro units and MicroBTC’s Whatsminer M30s, M30s+ and M30s++ models, among others.

- 38-to-68 J/TH includes mid-generation ASICs like Bitmain’s AntminerS17 and T17 series and MicroBT’s Whatsminer M20, M21 and M32 series models, among others.

- Over 68 J/TH includes old-generation ASICs like Bitmain’s Antminer S9, T9, S11 and T15 series and MicroBT’s Whatsminer M10 series, among others.

The daily estimated annualized electricity consumption of the Bitcoin network in terawatt-hours (TW/h), along with the hypothetical range (minimum and maximum) of what electricity consumption could actually be. Assumes an energy price of $0.05 per kWh.

The monthly total electricity consumption of the Bitcoin network in terawatt-hours (TW/h), along with a cumulative total. Assumes an energy price of $0.05 per kWh.

The daily total supply of bitcoin based on the block reward at the time.

The daily block reward for bitcoin. Every 210,000 blocks (~4 years), the block reward for mining a block on the Bitcoin network halves, slowing down issuance of the asset.

The daily number of Runes transactions vs non-Runes transactions on the Bitcoin network

The daily share between Runes vs non-Runes transactions on the Bitcoin network

The daily amount of fees paid on the Bitcoin network for Runes and non-Runes transactions

The daily share of fees paid on the Bitcoin network for Runes and non-Runes transactions

The number of Runes transactions on the Bitcoin network, broken down by mints, etches, and transfers

The amount of fees paid for Runes transactions on the Bitcoin network, broken down by mints, etches, and transfers

The daily number of bitcoin transactions broken down by Runes transactions, BRC-20 transactions, Ordinals transactions (excluding BRC-20), and other transactions.

The daily amount of fees paid for bitcoin transactions broken down by transaction type - Runes, BRC-20 transactions, Ordinals (excluding BRC-20), and others.

The monthly amount of Ordinals inscriptions by type - broken down by image, video, audio, text, and other