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Trump directs USTR Greer to impose more tariffs, raising fresh concerns for crypto miners

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President Trump is pushing for another round of tariffs, directing US Trade Representative Greer to ratchet up trade barriers. The move signals a deepening commitment to the protectionist playbook that has defined his economic agenda, and it’s already sending ripples through markets that extend well beyond traditional manufacturing.

For the crypto industry, “more tariffs” translates to a very specific problem: the hardware that powers Bitcoin mining and blockchain infrastructure overwhelmingly comes from overseas. And when import costs go up, someone has to eat the difference.

What’s actually happening

Trump has called for the US to impose additional tariffs, with his broader trade posture targeting Chinese goods in particular. His previous proposals have floated rates as high as 60% on imports from China, framed as a shield for domestic industries. The directive to USTR Greer suggests this isn’t just campaign rhetoric anymore. It’s moving toward policy.

This isn’t the first time the tariff lever has been pulled. When Trump implemented tariffs back in 2018, the cost of electronics imports climbed by roughly 15%. That’s not an abstract statistic for crypto miners. ASIC miners, GPUs, and the specialized chips that power proof-of-work networks are disproportionately manufactured in Asia, with China sitting at the center of the supply chain.

Here’s the thing. The last round of tariff implementation raised crypto mining hardware prices by an estimated 10-12%, according to analyses from Decrypt. A new, potentially steeper round of duties could push those costs even higher.

Bitcoin’s price already dipped 3% following Trump’s recent tariff comments, a modest decline by crypto standards but one that reflects real anxiety about what tighter trade barriers mean for the industry’s cost structure.

Why crypto miners should be paying attention

Sarah Jennings from The Block has highlighted that US crypto mining could become significantly more costly under new tariffs, potentially driving operations overseas. That’s the irony of protectionist trade policy applied to a global, decentralized industry. You try to keep jobs and manufacturing at home, but the economic pressure pushes the actual activity to jurisdictions with cheaper access to hardware.

The consolidation risk is real. Smaller mining operations running on thin margins don’t have the balance sheets to absorb a sudden spike in equipment costs. The likely outcome is that only the most well-capitalized players survive, further concentrating an industry that was already trending toward institutional dominance.

There’s a counterargument worth noting. Tariffs could theoretically accelerate domestic manufacturing of mining hardware and blockchain technology components. Analysts from CoinDesk have pointed to this as a potential silver lining, suggesting it could create opportunities for American crypto firms willing to invest in domestic supply chains.

Broader market implications for crypto investors

The initial market reaction, that 3% Bitcoin dip, reflects the tension between these two realities. Traders are pricing in the possibility that supply chain disruptions could slow network growth, delay hardware upgrades, and generally increase the cost of doing business in crypto.

For investors, the key variable to monitor is implementation speed. Campaign-trail tariff talk moves markets modestly. Actual executive orders with specific rates and timelines move them dramatically. The gap between Trump’s directive to Greer and the publication of a formal tariff schedule is where the real volatility lives.

cryptobriefing.com