Banner
Announcing TheMinerMag's API →

Miner Weekly: Bitmain Funnels 187 Tons of Antminer Parts to Skirt US Tariffs

July 24, 2025
Bitcoin mining facility in Iowa

This article first appeared in Miner Weekly, BlocksBridge Consulting’s weekly newsletter curating the latest news in bitcoin mining and data analysis from TheMinerMag. Subscribe to receive in your inbox once a week.


Bitmain, the world’s largest Bitcoin mining rig manufacturer, is stepping up its U.S.-bound shipments of electronic parts as it adapts to shifting trade dynamics and weaker post‑halving demand.

Subscribe to TheMinerMag's APIs today and leverage monthly miner shipment records, plus a suite of proprietary metrics, to inform your most crucial business decisions. Click here to learn more!

According to TheMinerMag’s monthly shipment records, Bitmain’s subsidiary in China began sending electronic components to its Delaware-based affiliate in June 2025—marking a notable change in logistics behavior. In total, the Chinese unit has shipped at least approximately 187,000 kilograms of electronic parts to the United States since June, a pattern not observed in earlier periods.

This move reflects Bitmain’s strategic shift toward localized assembly and manufacturing within the U.S., likely in anticipation of higher tariffs on Chinese-made products. The Trump administration has proposed escalating import duties on a wide range of Chinese goods, including electronics, which could significantly impact fully assembled mining hardware.

This isn’t Bitmain’s first reconfiguration of its U.S. logistics. As TheMinerMag previously reported, the company redirected over 50 EH/s worth of unsold Antminer S19XP machines from its Southeast Asian facilities to its Georgia subsidiary since 2023, likely for proprietary mining.

Those units, originally surplus from the bear market, appear to have been later repackaged under the balance sheet of Cango Inc., Bitmain’s newly established mining proxy on the NYSE.

The pivot to shipping components rather than complete units suggests Bitmain is prioritizing domestic manufacturing to mitigate tariff exposure and retain flexibility in a volatile trade environment. Similarly, the U.S manufacuring partner of Bitmain’s major rival MicroBT has continued importing computer parts for assembling WhatsMiner machines since the beginning of the last bear market, according to TheMinerMag’s data.

Zooming out, Bitmain’s evolving shipping and manufacturing strategies point to broader challenges in the mining hardware sector. Demand for new machines has slowed after Q4, with hashprice and transaction fees stabilizing at low levels. At the same time, geopolitical tensions have made long-term supply chain planning increasingly complex for hardware makers caught between global demand and domestic policy shifts.


Regulation News

  • Trump Calls Coin Center Testimony the “Greatest Bitcoin Explanation of All Time” – TheMinerMag

Hardware and Infrastructure News

  • Canaan to Supply Cipher With Bitcoin Miners From US Facility Amid Tariff Concerns – TheMinerMag

Corporate News

  • Bit Digital acquires 19,683 ETH, growing treasury to over 120,000 ETH – The Block
  • Mawson CEO Fired for Cause Amid Accusations of Fraud and Misconduct – TheMinerMag
  • Antalpha Founder Takes Chair at Cango as Bitcoin Mining Pivot Concludes – TheMinerMag

Financial News

  • Bitcoin Mining Firm Stock Spikes After $500 Million Raise for Dogecoin Treasury – Decrypt
  • Bitfarms Launches Share Buyback Program as Riot Trims Stake Below 10% – TheMinerMag
  • MARA Plans $1 Billion Convertible Notes to Bolster Bitcoin Holdings, Repay Debt – TheMinerMag

Get Weekly Mining Insights by Email

Subscribe to Miner Weekly newsletter