No reprieve for PC builders as skyrocketing metal prices set to impact component costs

zohaibahd

Posts: 935   +19
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Why it matters: If you've been putting off that PC upgrade or new laptop purchase, you might want to pull the trigger sooner rather than later. Tech prices are on the rise, thanks largely to skyrocketing costs for the precious metals and other raw materials used in electronics manufacturing.

The perfect storm of factors is conspiring to make our beloved gadgets pricier. Copper prices have been the real shocker - from around $5,000 per metric ton back in 2020 to $8,300 today, according to a report by DigiTimes. With copper wiring used in practically every electronic device, that spike is bound to filter down to consumers.

The increase is already impacting some suppliers. Several Chinese semiconductor companies have recently notified customers that they're jacking up prices by 10-20% immediately to account for materials inflation. Firms like battery protection experts ICM, circuit designers Yaxin, and testing houses like HaloChip and Chiplink are all passing along these higher costs.

You may not have heard of those companies, but they supply crucial components to some of the biggest names out there - Intel, Broadcom, Texas Instruments, and many more - meaning the price hikes are going to reverberate through the whole supply chain eventually.

It's not just about copper. Precious metals like gold are also getting more expensive for manufacturers to source. Between that and the huge demand for AI hardware like GPUs and storage, every piece of the electronics puzzle is seeing price pressures.

Compounding the pain, Western Digital last month warned of immediate price hikes on storage products this quarter due to soaring demand. And analysts predict client SSDs could see double-digit percentage price jumps through Q2 2024 alone after rising in Q1. With DRAM also projected to get 10-15% pricier for PCs and servers, the array of increasing costs spells trouble for builders and upgraders.

While these previous price hike projections may not be directly tied to the metals crunch, those rising costs on top of the higher component expenses from materials inflation mean PC builders and upgraders are stuck between a rock and a hard place.

The situation brings to mind the GPU pricing insanity during the crypto boom and pandemic years. But unlike those relatively short-term phenomena, this materials crunch could be more long-lasting. The appetite for AI hardware is only growing, putting more strain on already tight supplies.

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I mean, if everything becomes super expensive... who's gonna buy anything? The rich can't carry every company out there lol. People already refusing to upgrade today, with the so-called cheaper prices... It will be interesting to see what will happen. I can't even imagine more expensive GPU's, I just can't. They are already impossibly expensive for many people. I just got a 650 bucks RTX 3070, cus the alternatives ain't much cheaper here, with the tax and all. 4070 selling for 800 and the so called 1000 bucks 4080Super is selling for 1350-1400 lollololololllol. No wonder Playstation 5 is being sold out within seconds. You can't beat 450 bucks and good enough fps/resolution/gameplay. I suppose the prices of these might increase too, so again.. it will be interesting to see. Console people have a limit on how much they wanna spend for a system.
 
It has nothing to do with the price of metals, double the price of copper and the impact of 25-30g used in a laptop (Gold is something in the order of 0.05g) will remain negligible.

It is well known that Memory and NAND manufacturers control production, reducing supply, to drive prices to the level they want.
 
I mean, if everything becomes super expensive... who's gonna buy anything? The rich can't carry every company out there lol. People already refusing to upgrade today, with the so-called cheaper prices... It will be interesting to see what will happen. I can't even imagine more expensive GPU's, I just can't. They are already impossibly expensive for many people. I just got a 650 bucks RTX 3070, cus the alternatives ain't much cheaper here, with the tax and all. 4070 selling for 800 and the so called 1000 bucks 4080Super is selling for 1350-1400 lollololololllol. No wonder Playstation 5 is being sold out within seconds. You can't beat 450 bucks and good enough fps/resolution/gameplay. I suppose the prices of these might increase too, so again.. it will be interesting to see. Console people have a limit on how much they wanna spend for a system.

The problem is that consumer spending is still up relative to pre-pandemic, since wages for the upper-middle class have by and large outpaced inflation the past two years. So there isn't any incentive to eat the profit loss, since consumers are still buying even if prices go up.

"Everything is worth what his purchaser will pay for it". So long as consumers shell out the cash, there's no incentive to lower price.
 
A lot of companies use the "DeBeers" marketing idea. LIMIT supply, pump up demand.
Diamonds are not "rare", but since DeBeers pretty much has the global market of diamonds,
they control supply which keeps the price high.

I upgraded my home PC last May. Should hold me another 4-5 years.
 
Gee, I guess I'm going to have to hang on to this i3-530, GT-1030, Windows 7 rig I use to annoy you guys at Techspot for another decade or so...:p
 
Ugh, this is terrible news for anyone wanting to build a new PC! Metal prices are skyrocketing, which means all the components are going to get even more expensive. This isn't just a temporary thing either, with AI hardware demand being so high.
 
Gee, I guess I'm going to have to hang on to this i3-530, GT-1030, Windows 7 rig I use to annoy you guys at Techspot for another decade or so...:p
Same here, still using my 2011 intel Core2 Quad 9650, 16GB DDR3,RX480, Windows 10 rig! Still using 2012 Rig, intel with Modified Xeon Quad E5472 3Ghz CPU @ 1600MHZ to fit 775 board, 16GB DDR3 @ 1600Mhz, RX590!!
🤣🤣
 
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TechSpot got it wrong on SSD prices, I live within EU area, and bought Samsung 990 Pro 4TB NVME drive for exactly the same price I paid in 2020 for 1TB drive. Thats 4x capacity - 4 years later for the same price, what inflation!?
 
A lot of companies use the "DeBeers" marketing idea. LIMIT supply, pump up demand.
Diamonds are not "rare", but since DeBeers pretty much has the global market of diamonds,
they control supply which keeps the price high.

I upgraded my home PC last May. Should hold me another 4-5 years.

Wait you will replace you home PC in 4 years, wtf dude!? Mine is 4 years old, didn't even replace thermal paste so far, CPU temp still 40'C like day one, and you would trash yours???
 
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