Several retailers have hinted at price INCREASES for these cards due to diminishing supply.
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Several retailers have hinted at price INCREASES for these cards due to diminishing supply.
I don't see how this means that AMD/ATI is complacent (nice word)? Every company prices their product according to what people are willing to pay.
Same here but I actually heard the possibility of the HD 5870 going up by ~$20 and it hitting major supply issues through the next few months at least.
Basically, the price increase is being used as a way for retailers to control their inventories and is not being done on the behest of ATI...as far as I know.
From what it looks like, Fermi isn't as bad as people claimed but the $450/$550 prices are high. At $400/$500 Fermi would be OK, and even this wouldn't force ATI to drop prices.
470 performs equal to 5870, has more features but draws more power, which means a 5870 level price is justified. And if at %25 faster than 5870, a 480 at $500 is good too. But like I said, even those prices wouldn't force ATI to a price drop.
who would have thought that ati fans would be the ones suffering the most of nvidias fermi failure :lol:
funny :D
Well, ATI started being really profitable and obviously they don't want to go back.... Nvidia is not the only big-bad corporation :P
nvidia is ofcourse going to release the cards priced a little higher than whats recommended, simply to sell them to the fans who will be willing to pay top dollar. then after a few weeks they will come down once demand has leveled off. AMD has no reason to lower prices because they trying to get out a few more expensive cards at the same time to compete (5870 Six), so they will do the same thing, keep it higher at first.
by June 1st i would expect both companies to come down by 10-20%, but as long as stronger cards are launching, they wont.
god it seems the best time to buy stuff was last summer, since then everything except CPUs have just had horrible pricing trends
Prices are going up due to TSMC again(though not really TSMC's fault):
TSMC official statement:
http://www.tsmc.com/tsmcdotcom/PRLis...=E&newsid=4641Quote:
Hsinchu, Taiwan, R.O.C. – March 4, 2010 – TSMC (TWSE: 2330, NYSE: TSM) today announced that an earthquake of magnitude 6.4 on the Richter scale occurred in south Taiwan at 8:18 am Taiwan local time on March 4. The earthquake registered on instruments at TSMC's Tainan site at magnitude 5, and was measured at TSMC’s Hsinchu site at magnitude 2.
Current assessments reports show that the earthquake had minimal impact on Hsinchu fabs. While Tainan fabs suffered greater impact, they have gradually begun to resume production. Our initial estimate is that the earthquake caused the equivalent of 1.5 days loss of wafer movement for the company in total.
Expect gpu shortages until May.
Kinda sad since the prices were increased since demand outstripped supply, and now 1) Supply is much better and 2) Competition will be arriving soon.
I hear they lost the wafers already in production( no numbers on how many wafers were lost though), plus the lost time. This is why Fermi is delayed a week, and ATi stock is expected to be affected worse than nV's.
PCPerspectives reports shortages until May from both parties, hence everyone else saying kinda similar stuff(on thier podcast). Personally, I was expecting this of Fermi any way, due to the launch being @ a lan, rather than an industry event.
I guess the coming months may tell teh truth, but I expect retailer's to gouge just because they'll be slightly more tight on actual boxed units.