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AMD Allegedly Jacking Up RX 6000 GPU Prices by 10 Percent (extremetech.com) 51

As wafer costs increase, so are the costs of GPUs. According to a post on the Board Forums, AMD says it's increasing the price of its RX 6000 series GPUs by 10 percent across the board. ExtremeTech reports: This pricing change will apparently occur in the next shipment of GPUs to its partners, which will apparently drive up the price of these GPUs by $20 to $40 USD. This news arrives just in time for the holiday shopping season, when demand for GPUs is expected to increase even more, as if that is even possible.

According to a translation of the board posting, AMD is citing TSMC wafer costs as the reason for the change, and as we reported earlier, sub-16nm prices, including 12nm, 7nm, and 5nm, are said to have increased roughly 10 percent, while TSMC's older nodes have gone up by as much as 20 percent. AMD seems to be passing this price increase along to its partners, who in turn are passing it along to us, the customer, or the scalper, as it were. Then the scalper passes it along to us, the gamers. Although, as Videocardz points out AMD also produces its CPUs at TSMC and there hasn't been a similar across-the-board increase, which is curious.

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AMD Allegedly Jacking Up RX 6000 GPU Prices by 10 Percent

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  • ... at least AMD is doing their part about all those cyber grinches

  • All the electronics are going up, across the board... some just take longer than others. Most likely they have contracts with TSMC to produce CPUs for a certain price for a given length of time, and once those contracts are up CPUs will jump in price also.

    Network gear is going up... CPUs, servers, cars, phones... there's not much that isn't going up in price right now. Lots of reasons why, and I suppose we can't blame it all on our illustrious leader of the present time... even if it is all his fault he w

    • by systemd-anonymousd ( 6652324 ) on Monday November 29, 2021 @06:42PM (#62031673)

      We're sitting at 6% sustained inflation right now.

      I'll need a 6% raise just to not lose money

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • Missing from the price gouging discussion is the other side of the coin. Wages in many cases are increasingly subject to price fixing. Many areas have precious few employers for a given profession. Mergers not only make it easier for price fixing, but also wage suppression. Take the example from the link for Boeing. If you are an aerospace engineer of some kind you have just a few potential employers (basically Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Northrop Grumman, though my memory is fuzzy). Go back a few de

      • We're sitting at 6% sustained inflation right now.

        I'll need a 6% raise just to not lose money

        We are not at 6% where I live. My grocery bill is at least 15% higher, and gas prices are about as high as I have ever seen. I am not sure how that are calculating that 6%. Must be some of that "New Math" I have been hearing about.

        • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

          Same way it has been calculated for a while. "Select a few things we want to focus on, ignore the rest".

          Consider for example the fact that housing is typically not included in inflation calculus. Even though it's a de facto driver of much of economic activity today. Because if you did, a lot of places would see inflation greater than... median yearly salary of a worker in that region.

        • Because economists don't cherry pick data points. They have price indexes that they've been using for decades to normalize upswings in some commodities that are not representative of the entire economy. Example: if there is a shortage of petroleum so fuel prices rise, however durable goods are unaffected outside of increased logistics pricing stemming from the fuel price rise. They make an aggregate score of the price of many different classes of products, and then compare that score over time.

          It turns o

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Prices will begin to settle when all those ships sitting off the West Coast of North America from the Port of Los Angeles all the way up to the Port of Prince Rupert manage to offload. With the near total wipe out of most of the roads out of Vancouver during the big rain storms just over a week ago, the supply issues are just getting worse. And that's not even talking about supply chain issues that are mucking things in fab plants in Asia. It's just a really really really shitty time in international trade.

        • Prices will begin to settle when all those ships sitting off the West Coast of North America from the Port of Los Angeles all the way up to the Port of Prince Rupert manage to offload

          Maybe a little. There is more stuff passing through those ports. It's not just a simple backlog. People are buying more. And have been since a lot of income has been redirected away from travel and other intangible expenses.

          • There is definitely a significant backlog though. I flew into Portland a few weeks ago and there was no less than 5 container ships at anchor in the Columbia waiting to unload. I don't think I've ever seen that in Portland. I'm guessing a few ships decided that going several hundred miles north in order to have a shorter line to wait in was probably a good idea.

            • I'm not saying that there isn't a backlog. Just that it is not a simple one - that the historically standard amount of work is being done and then some. There is simply just way more work that needs done. Way more ships. The only time I've seen trains while driving in the last few months, they've been nothing but intermodal containers from end to end.

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • The refurb resellers are going gangbusters. I've bought a number of PCs in the last few months to replace crapped out or aging hardware. In part it's just availability. Even where the price is good, before I've had a chance to hit the "purchase" button, blammo they're out of stock. It's why I'm keeping my old laptop in reserve. It's a bit creaky, but if my new gets dropped off a shelf, I do not want to be trying to buy a new one in this market.

    • AMD will likely eat the cost increase on the CPU side since they're currently not competitive against intel's new alder lake platform. If intel is actually able to meet market demand, they may need to even drop prices there.

      On the bright side, the die size of a $450 CPU (5800x) is about 1/3 the size of a $450 GPU (6700xt), and AMD doesn't have to share the CPU price with a board partner.

  • It's less than 4 weeks to Xmas, they'll appreciate the notice and jam in an extra shift. That is if they love you.
  • Also known as... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 29, 2021 @07:04PM (#62031773)
    ...supply and demand.
  • I won't be buying any new video cards until they aren't subject to "scalping" because idiots think they should join the cool cats and "mine some coinz".

    I'll stick with my Nvidia 1080ti until it breaks or prices return to normal. It's way more performance than I need for my desktop already.

    Best,

    • Just wait until the TSMC 5/3nm fabs come online in a year or two. The market will be flooded and prices will come down.

      The reason AMD isn't upping prices for CPUs is because a) they already did that when Zen 3 came out b) Intel cut their prices so AMD can't raise theirs.

      NVIDIA just keeps jacking up their prices so AMD has little reason to cut theirs in GPUs.

    • Not a fan of crypto mining. But the reality is the skyhigh prices represent the return those idiots are getting. I bought a 6800 prior to xmas last year before prices exploded. When I am not gaming I let it mine, not because I believe in crypto but I will happily take the profits. Since getting the card I have made MORE than double its purchase cost and it probably only mines 75% of the time as I love gaming and sometimes I forget to set it back to mining after gaming. So happy to be one of those idiots.
      • The world's going to hell because of this kind of self-interest.

        Enjoy the ride, it's going to be bumpy.

    • I just want a cheap card that can decode 4k hevc in hardware. The gt 1030 fits the bill but used prices are over $100 while new cards can be had for $130.

  • No big deal, It's just a missing comma. Google's actual advice is: "if you see something going on that you think should be reported, then don't, be evil."

  • Scalpers have already driven up street prices far more than that. Moving MSRP really isn't going to make much difference.

  • AMD also produces its CPUs at TSMC and there hasn't been a similar across-the-board increase, which is curious.

    Not that curious. GPUs and CPUs are built on different processes.

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