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That may never come, unless you're talking about ex-mining cards dumped on ebay when the bubble bursts.
It's more than just COVID, Taiwanese drought, and Crypto mining though: Taiwan was exempt from the US-China trade war tariffs until December 31st last year, now they are not - and just like Brexit the price hike is bigger than just the tariff itself because it brings extra delays, inspections, administration - all of which adds cost to perform, and takes additional cost if you want to expedite that process.
Even when COVID's impact on manufacturing is 100% gone, and the droughts in Taiwan are over, and there is enough supply to go around because the miners aren't interested any longer - things will still be a bare minimum of 25% more expensive before tax and inflation are even considered, unless Joe Biden and Xi Jinping can come to an agreement.
It's not even as simple as the flat 25% price hike either, since some of the components that go onto those PCBs are from US-owned companies as well, and also subject to 25% tariffs. What if your GPU uses, say, Texas Instruments components that come from the US and get imported to Gigabyte? 25% tariff. Do you suck up that tariff or do you invest time and costs into finding a different solution using alternative Taiwanese parts instead? That's just one component in one direction at one stage of manufacture. Where do Texas instruments get their rare-earth metals from? Probably China, paying the 25% export tariff.
The "25%" tariff is just the raw value for a single jump across the divide. Everyone is making everything more expensive on both sides of the trade war and it's having a multiplicative effect. The more complex the end product the greater the likelihood that subcomponents have involved one or more additional US-China boundary hops :\
Thanks Donald, you 'helped' :\
I was talking about new. If it never comes, then it will be integrated graphics and everything at low settings