GodisanAtheist
Diamond Member
- Nov 16, 2006
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Did you see this mentioned or just an assumption by you?Presumably AMD is delaying N33's launch too. They will just take N33's wafers and shift them to Genoa.
What is the implied assumption here? There is another customer ready to snap up wafers.But TSMC has no incentive to reduce the contract size, where they get a lot of money per wafer, to then sell that same wafer for much less to others, when they can demand that Nvidia resells that wafer for much less to another company, so Nvidia is taking the loss, not TSMC.
Of course, TSMC might want to keep Nvidia happy by taking a bit of the loss themselves, but there is little incentive to take much of the loss, when companies don't pay TSMC more when the demand for wafers go up, and they still have a contract with a lower price than the then-current price per wafer.
Ultimately, to bargain you need leverage and Nvidia has very little. It's not like they showed loyalty to TSMC in the past, when they went to Samsung. AMD is a loyal TSMC customer, but Nvidia is not.
What is the implied assumption here? There is another customer ready to snap up wafers.
AMD can take Nvidia's vacated TSMC production capacity to make PS5 chips, assuming they have a die-shrink ready. Or just make extra Zen 4 chips and undercut Raptor Lake. Let there be a price war!
Yep, if the price goes down enough. Not mixing cause and effect. The price going down will be caused by a much deeper problem that will affect all demand. Nvidia, AMD, Intel, Apple, Samsung, auto makers, consumer electronics, etc. That is what I'm writing about.If the price goes down enough, someone will want those wafers. Also, at a certain price, Nvidia will prefer to keep those wafers off the market.
But again, that's Nvidia's problem, not TSMCs.
Did you see this mentioned or just an assumption by you?
Presumably AMD has plenty of unsold GPU inventory too.
I disagree.Just an assumption. Presumably AMD has plenty of unsold GPU inventory too.
Thing is, if the recession hits hard enough, that might be enough to get the money printer turned back on. Which means crypto and mining will be back. That's why I mentioned Q1.
Yea, mining is crashing now, but prior to this, nothing stayed on the shelf for a microsecond. Production is already shifting to next gen now, so I doubt their is much new stock lying around.
Production is already shifting to next gen now, so I doubt their is much new stock lying around.
On the used market, yes, lots of stock. But the new market? I doubt either manufacturer has any real stocks.
Interesting, online in the US (Newegg and Amazon) - I’m seeing cards going in and out of stock. Or, in stock by some third party seller at a $150 premium with a seller rating of 48% 🙄This is obviously false as there is plenty of stock in stores and at the warehouses. Otherwise there would be 'Out of Stock' on their site, but pretty much any model is in stock, except for the FE's.
For example, one Dutch shop says that their supplier has 444 ASUS TUF 3080's in stock. And that is just one 3080 model.
Interesting, online in the US (Newegg and Amazon) - I’m seeing cards going in and out of stock. Or, in stock by some third party seller at a $150 premium with a seller rating of 48% 🙄
Dogecoin is mined on ASICs dual-mined with LiteCoin.Well, Newegg still thinks their 3080s are all worth between $800 and $1000+. So there's the problem right there. At the same time, they still have basically half a year before the next gen arrives, so still plenty of time for people to build their dogecoin rigs and fill their garage with 3080s.
Ugh saw a 6600 XT on the Hot Deals subforum for $345 and all I could think was wow 5700XT performance for 5700XT price 2-3 years later.
New card prices are still pure distilled ass. It's a disappointing listening to people bragging about their $700 6900XT or $800 3080Ti like Jesus Christ people those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it.
This is obviously false as there is plenty of stock in stores and at the warehouses. Otherwise there would be 'Out of Stock' on their site, but pretty much any model is in stock, except for the FE's.
For example, one Dutch shop says that their supplier has 444 ASUS TUF 3080's in stock. And that is just one 3080 model.
In the UK almost any card at or below MSRP goes out of stock then a few days later more stock arrives, the more expensive cards tend to stay in stock permanently now. Some cards are stubbornly overpriced still like the 3060, 3060 Ti, 3070, 6600XT, 6650XT, 6700XT & 6750XT.
