Killing Bitcoin for $8 Billion: A Shocking Thesis Questioning the Reliability of Cryptocurrencies
A 51% attack made profitable by derivative markets
Bitcoin relies on Proof of Work, a mechanism where miners mobilize computational power to secure the network. A 51% attack would theoretically involve controlling a sufficient share of the hash rate to reorganize recent blocks, censor certain transactions, or execute double spending.
Canadian economist Campbell Harvey, a guest on the podcast The Wolf of All Streets, reminded that this risk has been known for a long time, but such an attack was previously considered economically irrational.
According to his own calculations, purchasing a sufficient number of mining machines to attack Bitcoin would represent about 0.5% of the total BTC market capitalization. Based on an estimated capitalization of $1.6 trillion, the cost of the operation would therefore reach around $8 billion.
Harvey adds that this multi-billion expenditure could be turned into profits if the attacker simultaneously took significant leveraged short positions in the derivative markets:
This thesis may worry more than one person, as the security of Bitcoin precisely relies on economic incentives and the cost of an attack. However, the initial estimate of $8 billion seems to overlook several important constraints that challenge its thesis.
Machines would not remain at the same price
Buying $8 billion worth of mining machines is not the same as placing an order on a liquid and deep market. The ASIC market is industrial, with limited stocks, production lead times of several months, and centralized among a few dominant manufacturers.
If a state or a large organization began to massively purchase these machines, their price would likely not remain stable. Demand would drive prices up, lead times would extend, and existing miners would have an interest in defending their position by increasing their computational power as well.
Harvey's static calculation is actually misleading, as the supply chain adds constraints that exceed the attacker's wallet size. The more the attacker buys, the more they reveal their intention, the more the market adapts, the higher the real cost increases, along with the extraction of raw materials serving other industries.
Energy, logistics, and raw materials complicate the scenario
Even assuming that the machines already exist or that enough of them are seized by the attacker, they would need to be transported, installed, cooled, maintained, and powered.
On the scale of an attack against Bitcoin, this represents several tens of millions of machines and several tens of TWh, which, as these detractors like to remind, exceeds the electricity consumption of small countries like Belgium.
Thus, a state could have a political interest in attacking Bitcoin, especially if it perceives BTC as a monetary threat. But conversely, the attacker would have a greater interest in using and protecting it, because it transforms hard-to-value energy into profit.
Shorts on Bitcoin do not guarantee a profitable attack
Finally, Campbell Harvey asserts that only taking positions in derivative markets could make this attack less costly, or even profitable.
However, to gain $8 billion with a 50% drop in BTC, approximately $16 billion in short positions would be needed. Even in the extreme scenario of BTC falling to zero, it would still require that platforms and counterparties have enough liquidity to open these positions and actually pay the generated gains.
Such a significant position would move prices, funding rates, margin requirements, and the attention of exchanges. Even if the technical attack worked, it would still require that platforms could absorb and then pay these gains in the midst of a liquidity crisis.
Thus, Campbell Harvey's thesis merits raising good questions, but claiming that it only takes $8 billion to attack Bitcoin while being profitable through the derivative market is more of a science fiction scenario than a real risk.
Indeed, although such an attack is theoretically possible, it does not seem viable as the Bitcoin network was precisely built to be more profitable to protect than to attack.
Disclaimer: This content is provided for general branding and informational purposes only and doesn't constitute financial, investment, legal, or tax advice. Any events, rewards, online events, or related information mentioned herein should not be considered a recommendation, solicitation, or invitation to purchase, sell, trade, or otherwise deal in any crypto assets or to use any services. Crypto assets are highly volatile and may result in loss. WEEX services and online events may not be available in all regions and are subject to applicable laws, regulations, and eligibility requirements. You are responsible for ensuring that your use of WEEX services complies with local laws and for carefully assessing the risks before participating in any crypto-related activities.
You may also like

Anthropic turns to Meta for $10B in computing power before IPO

CryptoQuant says Strategy still needs disciplined bitcoin buying and selling framework

Giant from Wall Street Bets on Altcoins. The First Actively Managed Crypto ETF Chooses These Tokens

Bitcoin Among the 10% Most Discounted in History: Is It Time to Buy?

UnitedHealth Surprises Wall Street and Signals Turnaround

Cardano Tests Support As ADA Traders Look For A Better Catalyst

Chainlink Holds Support As CCIP Adoption Becomes A Longer-Term Test

Solana Tests $77 Support As Risk-Off Pressure Spreads Across Layer 1s

XRP Stalls Below Resistance As Traders Wait For Regulatory Relief To Turn Into Demand

Ethereum Weakens As ETF Optimism Runs Into A Cooler Policy Backdrop

SEC Pushes Ahead with Plan to Eliminate Quarterly Earnings Reports Despite 200,000 Opposition Comments

"AI should not be the solo of one country": Xi Jinping mobilizes the Global South against American restrictions

Summer Vacation Season Sees Continued Gasoline Supply Crisis and Price Surge in the U.S.

Stripe and Swift race to control the next generation of global payments infrastructure

SEC E-Delivery Plan Could Change How Crypto Fund Disclosures Reach Investors

Kraken Borrow Update Turns Idle Collateral Into A More Flexible Trading Tool

Kraken Options Push Gives US Traders Another Route Into Regulated Crypto Risk

Bitcoin Could Reach $1 Million if Banks Allocate 1%, Says Creator of Latin America's First Bitcoin ETF

Kraken Institutional Adds Upshot Valuation Tools For A Harder-To-Price Crypto Market

SEC-CFTC Commodity Stance Faces Its First Real Political Stress Test

T. Rowe Price Active Crypto ETF Opens A New Lane For Multi-Asset Exposure

Inside Robinhood’s high-stakes bet to onboard 10 million casual users onto decentralized finance

Eli Lilly Acquires Psychedelic Company for $2.8 Billion

Nvidia May Lose Its Crown: Apple Approaches in Market Value

Wall Street Goes On-Chain: How DTCC Tokenized Stocks and Treasuries Could Transform Crypto RWA Markets
On July 15, 2026, DTCC — the backbone clearing house behind trillions in securities — processed its first live production trades of tokenized stocks, ETFs, and Treasuries, working with dozens of major financial firms. It's a direct step toward DTCC's commercial Tokenization Service, launching this October.

Crypto and Religion: Pakistan Seeks the Best Compromise

SEC Crypto Framework Could Finally Put DeFi Safe Harbors On The Table

World Cup: French Defeat Saves American Bookmakers

TRON Institutional: Institutions Holding the Currency Can Stake at Bank












