The latest GPU market share results for the first quarter of 2024 have been released by Jon Peddie Research. The data reveals a notable decline in shipments for NVIDIA, AMD, and Intel. According to the data, the overall UGP-AIB market declined -12.6% quarter-over-quarter and -38.2% year-over-year. Although the growing rate increased slightly by 8%, it also decreased by -21% year-on-year. In numbers, AIBs shipped 6.3 million discrete graphics cards in Q1 2023.
Quick Highlights
- JPR noted that AIB shipments declined 12.6% quarter-over-quarter in the quarter, below the 10-year average of -4.9%.
- Total AIB shipments decreased -38.2% quarter-over-quarter to 6.3 million units, compared to 7.16 million units in the previous quarter.
- AMD’s total desktop AIB shipments declined 7.5% quarter-over-quarter.
- Nvidia’s shipments declined 15.2% quarter-over-quarter. Nvidia continues to have a dominant market share at 83.7%.
- AIB shipments decreased by -38.2% year-on-year.
NVIDIA remains the market leader despite a decline to a market share of 84%. AMD maintains its unchanged market share of 12%, while Intel increases to 4%.
“Shipments of new AIBs were impacted by turndown in the PC market due to inflation worries and layoffs, and people buying last-gen boards as suppliers sought to reduce inventory levels. With inventory being run down, sales of new-generation boards will pick up, but not until Q3. Q2 is traditionally a down quarter, and the year won’t be any different, but probably not as severe as might be expected,” said Jon Peddie, JPR founder and president.
JPR has been tracking AIB shipments quarterly since 1987-the volume of those boards peaked in 1998, reaching 116 million units. Since Q1 2000, over 2.13 billion AIBs, worth about $490 billion, have been sold.
JPR calls the current market outlook a course correction and expects the situation to improve substantially in the second half of this year. This is because all manufacturers will offer more affordable and mainstream options to their customers. One example is NVIDIA, which recently launched its GeForce RTX 4060 series graphics cards and will launch more affordable variants in July. AMD has also launched the Radeon RX 7600 and is offering additional options. Both NVIDIA and AMD currently have older stock that can be used to target gamers in the mainstream and budget segments. In the consumer segment, Intel is very active and offers some of the best performance/price options.
The company has lowered the price of its Arc A750, which is now available for just $199. The 16GB Arc A770 is currently the cheapest 16GB option and costs less than $300. Despite new graphics cards entering the market, consumers have shown little to no interest in them due to the apparent poor price/performance ratio. GPU manufacturers, especially NVIDIA, have greatly increased prices for this generation. Although the features and efficiency of the new graphics cards are still outstanding, they are very expensive. In comparison, the mainstream RTX 4060 Ti and RTX 4060 graphics cards are priced the same or even cheaper than their predecessors. However, the performance gains are not as significant when compared to the RTX 4090, which offers an increase of over 50% over the 3090.
Source: WccfTech
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