Desktop GPU shipments dipped 16 percent year over year

Shawn Knight

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The big picture: Crypto miners flipped the GPU market on its end but now that the craze has passed, manufacturers are dealing with a hangover in the form of excess inventory. It'll eventually work itself out but the disruption could be felt well into 2019.

The cryptocurrency mining boom appears to be firmly in the rearview, and with it, its influence on the GPU market.

According to Jon Peddie Research, desktop graphics shipments were down 16 percent in the third quarter compared to the same period a year ago. Quarter over quarter, desktop graphics add-in boards that use discrete GPUs decreased 19.21 percent.

Jon Peddie, president of JPR, said the US tax increase on products from China, the drop in the US stock market and the effect of crypto mining on desktop discrete GPU sales all contributed to the slow sell-off of inventory, thus reducing demand to suppliers.

It may sound bleak but this is only the desktop market we are looking at. According to the report, overall GPU shipments increased 10.64 percent from last quarter. On a manufacturer basis, AMD shipments were up 6.5 percent, Nvidia shipments increased 4.3 percent and Intel’s shipments shot up 13.1 percent.

The overall PC market, JPR notes, increased 8.22 percent quarter over quarter and was up 0.30 percent compared to the same period in 2017. Tablet shipments, however, were down from last quarter.

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Not just crypto crash, but GPU progression has been meh. NVIDIA made subpar progress, but super expensive price. At least they made some progress, while AMD has made no progress at all with their best GPU matching 2016 2nd best GPU (1080). They still haven't gotten to Titan X(P) level yet either.

On the bright side, that means I can stick with my 2016 card for another year until 7nm.
 
In Canada a 2070 is about the same price as a 1080 and performs a little bit better on average. A 2080 is about the same price as a 1080 ti and performs just a bit better on average. A 2080 ti starts at 1,700CN and goes up from there to 2,000 or more.

So yeah, consumer purchasing is down? No ****. Graphics fidelity has been lagging with each generation since 2010. So we're paying more for less results and this latest generation is banking on everyone buying into the first iteration of a new "gee whizz" but unproven tech?

I'm sitting on two GTX 980's in SLI that I paid 1,300Cn for in 2014, so I can get a 1080ti or a 2080 for the same price that will perform, how much better? Yeah thanks anyway but I'll pass.
 
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