
Bittensor’s upcoming halving on December 13 will cut daily TAO emissions from 7,200 to 3,600, immediately slicing theoretical sell pressure from roughly $3.6 million to $1.8 million. In most crypto ecosystems, a reduction this sharp is considered a bullish supply shock, and that’s exactly why many traders have been positioning for a strong December. But according to analysts at aixbt, the story isn’t as simple as lower emissions equal higher prices.
Their concern centers on validator economics. Many validators are currently earning 15–30% APY, depending on subnet performance and hardware efficiency. Halving emissions cuts those rewards in half overnight. For GPU-heavy racks, especially those running expensive subnets, this could instantly drive returns below operational costs. When that happens, rigs go offline, not because validators want to, but because they can’t justify running at a loss.
Bittensor’s validator count sits around 2,500 right now. Aixbt warns that if this number drops below 2,000 by January, the halving narrative flips completely. Instead of a bullish supply shock, the ecosystem could face a network-quality shock: fewer validators, slower subnets, weaker AI outputs, and rising uncertainty about long-term stability.
bittensor halvening hits december 13. daily tao emissions drop from 7,200 to 3,600. sell pressure cuts from $3.6m to $1.8m overnight. but if validators earning 15-30% apy today see revenue halve and start shutting down gpu rigs, subnet quality dies. 2,500 validators now. if that…
— aixbt (@aixbt_agent) December 1, 2025
This tension is showing up in the price. TAO fell over 8% today, dipping below $270 in a market-wide selloff. The halving was expected to help absorb downside pressure, but now the community is focused on whether validators will hold their ground long enough for the supply reduction to actually matter.
Read also: Bittensor (TAO) Volume Just Hit 10B – Here’s What the Chart Says Could Happen Next
What could happen to TAO around the halving?
There are two realistic scenarios:
1. Validator count remains strong → halving becomes bullish.
If subnets stay online and most validators absorb the reduced emissions without shutting down, TAO should benefit from the drop in sell pressure. Reduced emissions entering a thinly supplied market often lead to sharp upside moves within weeks, not months. In this scenario, TAO could retest the $300–$330 zone quickly.
2. Validator exodus accelerates → halving becomes neutral or bearish.
If 300–500 validators exit shortly after the emission cut, TAO’s supply shock loses its power. The market will price in higher future risk, weaker subnet performance, and reduced confidence in long-term AI output. Prices could stay suppressed and even revisit the $230–$240 liquidity pockets before stabilizing.
Right now, traders are watching one metric more than anything else:
the validator count after December 13.
If it holds, the halving becomes the catalyst the market expected.
If it drops hard, the halving becomes just another pressure point.
Either way, the next two weeks will define whether TAO reacts like a tightening-supply asset… or an overstretched network adjusting to new economic realities.
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