Well here we go, they are starting to stabilize and come down to retail pricing and below as well as a bit more availability I think.
http://www.microcenter.com/search/search_results.aspx?N=4294966937&sortby=pricehigh&NTK=all&page=1&cat=Video-Cards-:-Video-Cards,-TV-Tuners-:-Computer-Parts-:-MicroCenter
It's good because I've got about 27 days left to return that Titan Xp, thanks Nvidia!
The massive computing power of high-end consumer graphics cards make them ideal for mining Ethereum and a number of lesser-known cryptocurrencies. (Bitcoin's simpler mining algorithm long ago came to be dominated by custom ASICs, making GPU-based bitcoin mining unprofitable.) As a result, the cryptocurrency boom that began last year led to a boom in demand for graphics cards.
Prices soared last summer, then soared even more in early 2018. By February, the going rate for high-end graphics cards like the Radeon RX 570 and RX 580 was more than double what it had been nine months earlier.
But now the graphics-card boom seems to be coming to an end.
The price of ether and other major cryptocurrencies has been trending downward since January. And since February, graphics-card prices have generally been heading in the same direction.
"Profits have dropped quite a bit," one Ethereum miner told Ars by email. "The video-card shortage seems to be mostly over."
Another miner agreed: "The card shortage is definitely over."
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2018/04/why-this-years-insane-graphics-card-price-surge-might-be-over/