Nvidia and AMD could kill some low- to mid-range graphics cards as memory shortage crisis intensifies

midian182

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Ripple effect: The rising price of memory is quickly turning from a concerning issue into a crisis on the scale of the Covid-era chip shortage. With the RTX 5000 Super line now seeming delayed – if not canceled entirely – due to the shortages, there are new reports that Nvidia and AMD could reduce production of their low- to mid-range graphics cards, perhaps discontinuing some of the lower-priced GPUs, while simultaneously hiking prices across the board.

According to the Korea Economic Daily (highlighted by Jukan on X), Nvidia and AMD are considering discontinuing their cheaper gaming GPUs where memory costs account for a large share of the bill of materials (BOM).

The report comes just after we saw posts on Chinese social media site Weibo claiming AMD is planning to hike the prices of its graphics cards. AMD previously introduced an increase for its industry customers that hasn't affected retail prices, but the new "second wave" of increases for both GPUs and graphics memory will be even larger and likely lead to higher end-market prices. Morevoer, if AMD does it, expect Nvidia to do the same.

As illustrated by the Steam survey, mid- to lower-end graphics cards are the most popular products among PC gamers, taking the majority of the top spots on Valve's table. A price increase or ending lines entirely, especially during these times of economic uncertainty, is a nightmare scenario. The closeness to the holiday season makes it an even bitterer pill to swallow.

It's not just graphics cards being affected. Commercial Times writes that some motherboard makers and notebook ODM vendors have paused new motherboard development or mass production. Smartphones and tablets could also be impacted, while DDR5 prices have doubled.

The RTX 5000 Super line was rumored to pack more VRAM, an area where Nvidia has been repeatedly criticized. But with GDDR7 prices shooting up, Nvidia would have to price the cards much higher than their non-Super versions, which would cause a lot of outcry. Team Green appears to have opted to delay or cancel the new product line instead.

As noted in our feature on the issue, recent deals between AI companies and data-center builders have set aggressive timelines to construct gigawatts of data-center capacity in just 2 to 3 years. AI data centers require massive amounts of DRAM to meet the memory needs of modern AI models, especially on GPUs.

This means memory supply and future manufacturing has already been bought out. GDDR memory shares manufacturing capacity with other types of DRAM, so when manufacturers prioritize AI products, consumer-focused memory supply takes the hit.

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"You can thank AI for hoarding all the DRAM like it's toilet paper in 2020"

No.

You can "thank" the same companies you mention that do it. YES, they do it for the "AI bubble".
 
"Nvidia and AMD could kill some low- to mid-range graphics cards"

OH NOES! I have one of those cards in my PC!
My CPU doesn't have integrated praphics so my machine would be dead!
In case that happens...GOODBYE
 
This article pretty much tells you THEY don’t care about retail, because they’ll eat any price they’re thrown ($2-6K graphics cards are one such example of a degenerating society).
 
I smell a cynical scheme hope it backfires with some epic proportion.

Getting people to buy now, but in the mean time there is no shortage.

They know people have no self control.
 
Once the credit crunch hits then people buying only high-end cards will run out of money. Green line can't go up for ever and trying to protect margins over market share will backfire on everyone. Funny thing is, only the rich have money rightnow and they will stop buying things when the banks stop lending it to them.

It's like they priced out low-end and entry level gamers(over 70% of the market, according to Valve) and they're surprised that people aren't paying $600 for 60 class cards.

"People aren't buying our overpriced cards, maybe we should just stop making them instead of adjusting our pricing."

Also, obligatory AI plug.
 
I love how, just a few short years ago, when EVGA dropped out people were clutching their pearls over EVGA's excuses, how high end cards had super tiny margins that manufacturers couldnt survive on, and how the low end/ mid range was where the money is at. Then they did it AGAIN when AMD used that same justification to leave high end AMD buyers high and dry yet again.

Now that prices are rising and margins are squeezing....we are expected to believe manufacturers are going to drop those higher margin, lower cost cards and pour everything into the memory hungry high end cards that supposedly nobody makes money on?

LOL can we get the conspiracy theory straight first?
 
Here’s a thought…have we thought about this helping iGPUs taking over the low-end market? That isn’t a future I have a problem with. Low end cards are notoriously poor value. I’m excited by the power of integrated graphics these days.
 
Yep...and I'm sure that they will be watching each other, to see how much jacking up they can get away with.
 
I love how, just a few short years ago, when EVGA dropped out people were clutching their pearls over EVGA's excuses, how high end cards had super tiny margins that manufacturers couldnt survive on, and how the low end/ mid range was where the money is at. Then they did it AGAIN when AMD used that same justification to leave high end AMD buyers high and dry yet again.

Now that prices are rising and margins are squeezing....we are expected to believe manufacturers are going to drop those higher margin, lower cost cards and pour everything into the memory hungry high end cards that supposedly nobody makes money on?

LOL can we get the conspiracy theory straight first?

They make money hand-over-fist on the high end for server/data center use. From a profit perspective, the consumer grade items could be considered a loss comparatively.
 
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