Nvidia absolutely must out with an x86 APU within the next two years to stay viable in the consumer PC market or face being bought out by Intel - the latter of which may not be an attractive alternative.
Sounds like a good time to buy.
I disagree. They can stay in the high end discrete GPU market and still make decent money. They are still the top GPU company in the world. AMD being a close second. That means so long as there isn't another Fermi within the next year, they'll still be a viable business. Obviously they still lose out on the low to mid range since those will be completely taken over by Intel and AMD via integrated CPU+GPU on the same die.
The major reason why they don't need to put out an x86 processor is because of the number of devices using ARM CPU's. Android phones and iPhones all use ARM I believe. There are tablets coming out utilizing ARM CPU's. There is a growing viable alternative to x86 processors in the ARM CPU. nVidia is taking part with their Tegra line of chips that integrate an ARM CPU with nVidia's graphics technologies.
Load up on Nvidia and Blockbuster. You'll be a millionaire in no time.
Its quite strange that so many bad stuff is happening to nVidia, the mac thing, the fermi problem at first, lost market share, the Rambus crap, less profits, bad sales of some of their SKU, drop in value of their shares, all those things had make JHH stay quiet for a long time, is he still feeling the effects of the Can of Whoop Ass?
Maybe they have another trick up their sleeve but the CEO dumping stock like the boat was sinking isnt exactly comforting.
I wonder how much blame for this serious market share/stock price fall will be attributed to the anti NV backlash created by their own Focus group
members?
We discussed nvidia's situation in more depth here. GF104 is only going to slow the rate of deterioration. They need to find a replacement for the lost chipset business, and get the other parts of their business growing faster.
ATi: "Our Germans are better then their Germans"
+1 If you know the movie quote
I see this sort of comment time and again, making it quite obvious that the poster of such a comment has NO clue as to how an officer of a company can sell stock.
Just an FYI, SilverTrine, when a CEO or other officer wants to sell stock, that person has to file many months ahead with the SEC his/her intention to sell said stock. It's never done as "normal" stock holders can.....buy or sell at a whim.
I'm thinking this has a lot to do with it, too.
For years it was their fastest growing segment (seemingly doubling from previous reporting periods every time I checked). I was really surprised at the levels it was reaching as a percentage of their income.
I'm too lazy to see what it is now but I suspect it has dropped considerably over the last few years.
Now there's a point I wholeheartedly second. Because I'm looking for a notebook to be a second computer and, frankly, anything besides Optimus won't do for me - it will either be too slow, would die within (metaphorical) seconds of being unplugged from the wall (seriously - 2.5 hours?), or have to be restarted two hundred times per day for old-style switchable graphics. And the GF 104/106/108 will be decent if not very good if the 460 is any indication. Actually, if it were in the price range I was looking for, I'd get a GTX 460 for my desktop. And all this coming from a guy who doesn't like nVidia at all.snip
...and optimus's many design wins should turn into masses of sales.
snip
I thought the consensus was that you needed high volume parts to spread overhead costs.
I see this sort of comment time and again, making it quite obvious that the poster of such a comment has NO clue as to how an officer of a company can sell stock.
Just an FYI, SilverTrine, when a CEO or other officer wants to sell stock, that person has to file many months ahead with the SEC his/her intention to sell said stock. It's never done as "normal" stock holders can.....buy or sell at a whim.
And what's even more showing of ignorance is the fact that stock options are how nvidia is paying its CEO and other officers the majority of their compensation like a lot of firms, so if they want any $$, they have to sell some of the stock they've been paid with. And the stock sales are timed months ahead of when they're done.
And if one would look at other companies that compensate their execs. with stock options, one would see similar patterns.
Of course, the final nail in the ignorance coffin of Trine's posting is he fails to consider the volume of stock being sold vs. the amount being held. In the case mentioned, the stock amount being sold is around 1%, not exactly dumping stock.
I dont see how Nvidia can pull out of this death spiral personally. Apple just dumped them which means the guidance for Nvidia's future desktop/laptop parts is bad. If Apple expected Nvidia to be ahead in a year or so they would have been more diplomatic. They just got bent over by Rambus which could cost them a fortune.
They've burnt a lot of bridges by how they handled the failures of some of the lines of their GPU's. They burnt bridges with Microsoft of all people, I'm sure that had nothing to do with why it took them forever to get a Dx11 part.
All this in the middle of a recession when their biggest competitor is stealing a bigger part of a pie that is shrinking.
Maybe they have another trick up their sleeve but the CEO dumping stock like the boat was sinking isnt exactly comforting.
um, do you mean an amd-like "death spiral", or a more garden variety one? a couple years ago amd was getting obliterated by nvidia and they still managed to pull through, fermi is just a speed bump for nvidia right now. if we look up 18 mos from now and amd has double the discrete market share of nvidia then I'll get worried.
ATI getting obliterated in the past and coming back has nothing to do with the future, since the graphics market is changing towards an integrated chip model where GPU and CPU are on the same die.
um, do you mean an amd-like "death spiral", or a more garden variety one? a couple years ago amd was getting obliterated by nvidia and they still managed to pull through, fermi is just a speed bump for nvidia right now. if we look up 18 mos from now and amd has double the discrete market share of nvidia then I'll get worried.