This report focuses on three key segments—mining rig manufacturing, self-operated mining farms, and cloud mining. It provides a comprehensive review of global mining landscape shifts by analyzing supply chains, cost structures, geopolitical transitions, and stock performance. The report also evaluates how policy shocks feed back into Bitcoin’s medium- to long-term price structure.
Abstract
In April 2025, the Trump administration announced the implementation of a “reciprocal tariff” policy, imposing a uniform 10% “minimum benchmark tariff” on all global trade partners. The policy triggered significant turbulence across global risk assets.
Bitcoin, as a leading public blockchain using the Proof-of-Work (PoW) consensus mechanism, relies heavily on physical mining hardware—equipment that is not included in the U.S. tariff exemption list. As a result, mining companies are under substantial cost pressure.
Over the past month, mining rig manufacturers experienced the sharpest stock price declines, as they were hit on both the supply and demand sides by the tariff policy.
Self-operated mining farms were mainly impacted on the supply side, with the process of selling mined Bitcoin to cryptocurrency exchanges largely unaffected by the tariffs.
Cloud mining farms were the least affected, due to their business model of shifting equipment acquisition costs to customers through service fees, which significantly cushions the impact on platform profitability compared to traditional mining models.
Despite the tariff policy’s negative impact on the U.S. Bitcoin mining industry, institutional players such as BlackRock’s IBIT (a spot Bitcoin ETF) and MicroStrategy (a Bitcoin-holding public company) maintain their dominant influence over market pricing.
Bitcoin’s price alone is no longer the sole indicator. Instead, factors such as policy direction, geopolitical security, energy allocation, and manufacturing stability have become the true keys to the mining industry’s long-term viability.
(Click below to access the full report)
Gate Research Gate Research is a comprehensive blockchain and crypto research platform that provides readers with in-depth content, including technical analysis, hot insights, market reviews, industry research, trend forecasts, and macroeconomic policy analysis.
* Informasi ini tidak bermaksud untuk menjadi dan bukan merupakan nasihat keuangan atau rekomendasi lain apa pun yang ditawarkan atau didukung oleh Gate.io.
* Artikel ini tidak boleh di reproduksi, di kirim, atau disalin tanpa referensi Gate.io. Pelanggaran adalah pelanggaran Undang-Undang Hak Cipta dan dapat dikenakan tindakan hukum.
This article explores how reciprocal tariff policies affect global financial markets through macroeconomic transmission mechanisms. It further analyzes their impact on the ecosystems of stablecoins, real-world assets (RWAs), and decentralized finance (DeFi), examining both the underlying mechanisms and the potential risks and opportunities involved.
Yala inherits the security and decentralization of Bitcoin while using a modular protocol framework with the $YU stablecoin as a medium of exchange and store of value. It seamlessly connects Bitcoin with major ecosystems, allowing Bitcoin holders to earn yield from various DeFi protocols.
This report focuses on three key segments—mining rig manufacturing, self-operated mining farms, and cloud mining. It provides a comprehensive review of global mining landscape shifts by analyzing supply chains, cost structures, geopolitical transitions, and stock performance. The report also evaluates how policy shocks feed back into Bitcoin’s medium- to long-term price structure.
In April 2025, the Trump administration announced the implementation of a “reciprocal tariff” policy, imposing a uniform 10% “minimum benchmark tariff” on all global trade partners. The policy triggered significant turbulence across global risk assets.
Bitcoin, as a leading public blockchain using the Proof-of-Work (PoW) consensus mechanism, relies heavily on physical mining hardware—equipment that is not included in the U.S. tariff exemption list. As a result, mining companies are under substantial cost pressure.
Over the past month, mining rig manufacturers experienced the sharpest stock price declines, as they were hit on both the supply and demand sides by the tariff policy.
Self-operated mining farms were mainly impacted on the supply side, with the process of selling mined Bitcoin to cryptocurrency exchanges largely unaffected by the tariffs.
Cloud mining farms were the least affected, due to their business model of shifting equipment acquisition costs to customers through service fees, which significantly cushions the impact on platform profitability compared to traditional mining models.
Despite the tariff policy’s negative impact on the U.S. Bitcoin mining industry, institutional players such as BlackRock’s IBIT (a spot Bitcoin ETF) and MicroStrategy (a Bitcoin-holding public company) maintain their dominant influence over market pricing.
Bitcoin’s price alone is no longer the sole indicator. Instead, factors such as policy direction, geopolitical security, energy allocation, and manufacturing stability have become the true keys to the mining industry’s long-term viability.
(Click below to access the full report)
Gate Research Gate Research is a comprehensive blockchain and crypto research platform that provides readers with in-depth content, including technical analysis, hot insights, market reviews, industry research, trend forecasts, and macroeconomic policy analysis.
* Informasi ini tidak bermaksud untuk menjadi dan bukan merupakan nasihat keuangan atau rekomendasi lain apa pun yang ditawarkan atau didukung oleh Gate.io.
* Artikel ini tidak boleh di reproduksi, di kirim, atau disalin tanpa referensi Gate.io. Pelanggaran adalah pelanggaran Undang-Undang Hak Cipta dan dapat dikenakan tindakan hukum.
This article explores how reciprocal tariff policies affect global financial markets through macroeconomic transmission mechanisms. It further analyzes their impact on the ecosystems of stablecoins, real-world assets (RWAs), and decentralized finance (DeFi), examining both the underlying mechanisms and the potential risks and opportunities involved.
Yala inherits the security and decentralization of Bitcoin while using a modular protocol framework with the $YU stablecoin as a medium of exchange and store of value. It seamlessly connects Bitcoin with major ecosystems, allowing Bitcoin holders to earn yield from various DeFi protocols.