Bitmain, China’s undisputed king of Bitcoin mining hardware, is making a bold power play: moving into the U.S.
According to Bloomberg, the company will launch its first American manufacturing facility by late 2026, starting with 250 local hires. Not just for PR — this is production-grade infrastructure, with operations kicking off in phases.
Bitmain is also hunting for a new U.S. HQ, shortlisting Texas and Florida — two red-hot states for crypto policy, business incentives, and, yes, Trump vibes.
“The U.S. offers a unique opportunity,” said Bitmain global head Irene Gao. “Local production makes sense—even if labor is expensive—because of tariffs and shipping headaches.”
Bitmain isn’t moving just for the BBQ. The real driver? Politics.
This isn’t just logistics—it’s survival. And Bitmain is betting big on “Made in USA” as both a regulatory shield and a marketing flex.
If Bitmain wanted validation, they got it from the numbers:
Bitmain’s entry cements the U.S. as the new center of gravity in crypto mining — with regulatory clarity, institutional money, and a whole lot of watts.
One catch: regulatory ghosts don’t die easy.
While Trump may be loosening the crypto leash, federal agencies aren’t always aligned. Bitmain’s path won’t be frictionless.
This isn’t a side quest — it’s a strategic reboot.
Bitmain’s U.S. expansion signals:
If they pull it off, Bitmain won’t just sell machines. They’ll shape how and where Bitcoin gets mined for the next decade.
Bitmain is building a 250-job U.S. facility and eyeing a new HQ in Texas or Florida. The shift is fueled by Trump-era tariffs, Biden-era security fears, and China's mining ban. With the U.S. now dominating global hashrate, this move could realign the balance of power in crypto mining. It’s not just a factory—it’s a geopolitical statement.
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