Read more.April saw a steep drop-off in cryptocurrency miner demand, says industry journal.
Read more.April saw a steep drop-off in cryptocurrency miner demand, says industry journal.
Already seen prices dropping on older cards second hand. Boom has ahem boomed I reckon!
Old puter - still good enuff till I save some pennies!
AMD prices seem obstinately high still, is this another case of graphics==Nvidia? I can get a 1070ti way cheaper than a Vega 56 (£420 vs £540) which says to me that we don't yet have healthy competition in the AMD video card market.
Who actually hikes the prices up?
Is it Nvidia/AMD, the card manufacturers or the retailers like Scan?
Old puter - still good enuff till I save some pennies!
Old puter - still good enuff till I save some pennies!
From what I've read (on this site and others) is that AMD is not generally adding to the price, but with high demand and stock passing through several distributors before it gets to the consumer the price has 'naturally' increased, supply and demand and all that. I've been holding out, initially as my 380X was still pretty new when the 480 came out, but then the prices shot up. I could really do with a 580 for my 2k screen but not when £400 is 'cheep'.
I believe AMD was willing and able to produce more GPUs with their manufacturing partners. However their board partners like MSI, Sapphire etc didn't want to buy extra GPU's because they were afraid of the mining bubble bursting and getting stuck with a huge inventory of old GPUs. The board partners were producing graphics cards going on demand from historical data instead of current market demand because of this bubble burst fear. This created the shortage.
The distributors were getting fewer cards but the retailers were placing orders for ever increasing quantities. The price was simply set by supply and demand at this point. With retailers buying cards at a higher price then normal in order to secure stock.
mtyson (25-04-2018)
I have to wonder why it's so expensive though, surely by now any supply issues should have been resolved for things like HBM etc, which was one of the reasons provided somewhere for the higher pricing. They had the price almost right at launch, then it just went up to stupid silly pricing.
I will NOT buy a new card at the prices being asked currently, I just can't justify it. I mean, why would I pay that much for something, when I can just buy a console for less than that and have change spare?
Overclockers seem to be one of the better suppliers atm, they have a choice of seen Vega 56 cards and all are in stock with most saying "10+" as stock level. The cards seem to be there, but most etailers don't seem to list them.
https://www.overclockers.co.uk/pc-co...eon-rx-vega-56
I have to wonder if the retailers have bought them at a marked up price from the channel and now have the shift them at that markup.
The reward will be halved this year for mining with gpu so we will see a drop off in prices going into 2019. The fear I have is AMD is promoting CPU for mining, will we see a sharp rise in their upper end cpu lineup?
Threadripper can be promoted for that and kept separate from the lower end Ryzen's. Yes I believe that the AMD supplies haven't got back down to a decent level as the drop is so soon they paid full whack and are reluctant to lose money. NV appear to be sold at more of a mark up and there is more wiggle room at present - we all know that mining has stifled a lot of innovation in this market as the artificial high prices mean they are reluctant to shift prices along and change things as people were just buying them anyway but I can see some sanity appearing of the news is to be believed. A 40% drop will force changes....just how long till they filter down is the issue
Old puter - still good enuff till I save some pennies!
In a nutshell, computer performance is lasting longer. My GPU is now 4 generations old and can still handle everything. Only people needing higher framerates/resolutions , or specific computation actually need to upgrade.
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