Prices for processors graphics (GPU) in China fell sharply after the country banned the cryptocurrency mining, property and transactions.
The drop in demand for graphics cards means a drop in price, and is a direct result of Beijing's decision, according to the South China Morning Post.
China's leaders do not seem to care about Bitcoin and Ethereum, saying the currencies have no intrinsic value and can be manipulated, making them a bad investment. So now that cryptocurrency mining has been completely banned in Sichuan, Inner Mongolia and Xinjiang, there is less demand for hardware and therefore lower prices.
Both the old and the new models of GPUs have reduced prices. The model Nvidia The 1000nm Quadro P14 launched in 2017 is priced at 2.429 yuan ($376) on JD.com, a popular Chinese store, down from 3.000 yuan ($464) before. The Asus GeForce RTX3060, announced earlier this year, is priced from 13.499 yuan ($2087) to 4.699 yuan ($763) on Tmall, another Chinese online store.
The trend seems to be catching on in America, as some have noted users of Reddit.
This of course is very good news for gamers and manufacturers computers looking for hardware. Nvidia recently announced that it had rolled back the mining capability on its latest GeForce RTX GPUs in an effort to weed out miners after gamers complained they were paying more because of the miners.
The Chinese ban, meanwhile, has pushed down the price of Bitcoin. In a statement issued Monday, the People's Bank of China said it had spoken with representatives of the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, the Agricultural Bank of China, the Construction Bank, the Postal Savings Bank, the Industrial Bank and Alipayay Technology (China), reminding them not to promote such currencies and not to provide account services.