I don't agree with that. AMD tried this strategy for 3 generations in a row and it didn't work:
1) Didn't result in high consumer switching from NV;
2) Didn't result in significantly higher market share (actually NV ended with 62-63% desktop discrete after HD4800/5800/6900 series were all counted);
3) AMD's GPU division barely made $ on an annual basis.
It's pretty clear that strategy was great for consumers but a failure overall for the company.
Actually in some quarters, AMD's GPU division lost $ using this strategy. ATi's pricing method made was Premium, never price/performance, and it resulted in them producing very fast high-end GPUs. The end result was that company was hugely profitable and ATi's brand name was considered premium because they wouldn't dare sell an X850Pro / X850XT for $269/ $369 on launch day. If AMD goes back to price/performance ($299 8950 and $369 for 8970) voluntarily without GK110 clobbering them, it's an admit of failure for the new strategy the firm exercised (First Mover Advantage). You can't market yourself as a premium brand and sell a $500 GPU as a $350 GPU. Of course as customers, we would have loved a $350 HD7970 at launch but AMD made the right move since selling $300-350 flagship cards is not sustainable with rising wafer prices as continuous node shrinks get more expensive. $500 GTX680 could not even beat the 7970 series this round. So why should AMD have priced 7970 at $369? People have a serious double standard with paying $400-500 for AMD cards that perform the same or faster than a GTX680 this generation it seems. Even when unlocked 6950s were going for $250 and you could get 2 of those for the price of a 580, it still didn't really matter. Why continue on the same failed strategy that hasn't worked for 3 generations in a row? This was exactly why AMD rushed HD7900 series with 925mhz clocks since they wanted those high margins.
When GTX280 launched at $649 and even later fell to $499, it was still $200 more expensive than 4870 but 20% faster. HD7970 was easily 20% faster than a 580 without overclocking and cost $110 more than $440 market rate for 580s then. The main reason AMD got away with this pricing strategy is because NV went MIA on GK110 and delivered 680 that was barely faster. You can only put 50% of the blame on AMD. The other 50% has to fall on NV for way under-delivering with the GTX680.
This is the fundamental difference: It's impossible to claim that only AMD is ripping us off now this generation when NV is doing the same (and frankly has been doing so for 6 years with $500-600 flagship cards). If you want to say AMD is ripping us off, then so is NV. $500 GTX680 294mm^2 is not exactly the price/performance part. Ironically, AMD gets all the heat for raising prices because "well NV kept the price at $500". This is the same story Intel is pulling on us. The price stays the same but the die keeps shrinking. Damn right NV raised prices big time. They went from selling us a 520mm^2 384-bit bus chip to a 294mm^2 256-bit bus chip. NV definitely raising prices but did so in a sneaky way that only people who follow tech closely would see. Also, GTX660Ti is a real GTX460 replacement and price went up from $229 to $299.
Most ironic NV only had superior price/performance for 1 quarter (March to June), while 7970 went totally uncontested from January to March and then after June price cuts and Cats 12.7, again 7970/7970GE delivered better value and performance than 670/680s. NV continues to charge
$580 for their premium 680, but a premium 7970 GE is
$450. NV continues to overcharge by $75-100 on their 680 line overall and it's not getting any backlash. It looks like AMD has actually been delivering both the price/performance and performance since June. If anything, it's NV that continues to rip off consumers with $400-420 670 and $500-550 680s.