Analyst Discusses Recent Dip in GPU and PC Shipments
JPR's Jon Peddie explains why the decrease is not as alarming as they seem
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Analyst Discusses Recent Dip in GPU and PC Shipments Duration
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September 12, 2022
Jon Peddie Research's (JPR) has just released its report on 2022 Q2's GPU and PC shipment. The numbers look rather bleak. According to the report, “PC, GPU market shipments decreased by -12.7% sequentially and decreased by -32% year to year.” Breaking down the numbers from the industry leaders, the report also reveals, “Overall GPU unit shipments decreased by -14.9% from last quarter. AMD’s shipments decreased by -7.6%, Intel’s shipments decreased by -9.8%, and Nvidia’s shipments decreased by 25.7%.”
Jon Peddie, founder of the analyst firm JPR, acknowledges the numbers are discouraging, but he also views them as signs of a much-needed correction—“all of the chickens have come to roost,” in his grandmother's famous words.
During the last two years, with the COVID-19 shutdown forcing people to work from home, PC sales surged. “It did not represent a trend because of COVID would eventually go away ... Then there was a falloff when people got their home office equipped and didn't need to buy any more new stuff ... we are now working our way through excess inventory that was built by unwarranted enthusiasm and continued disruptions to the supply chain,” he explains.
Recently, at SIGGRAPH 2022, Intel introduced three new entry-level GPUs, showing its plan to penetrate the GPU market is no longer theoretical. Peddie weighs in on the CPU maker's entry after numerous faltered starts. “As good a company as Intel is, maybe one of the best in the world, it's still hard work [to get up to speed on GPU design and manufacturing.] I would forecast that we won't see Intel being in that steady state condition, probably until the end of next year at the earliest. [But once they get there] they are going to have one hell of an impact on the market,” he predicts.
Peddie also thinks Intel's entry will revitalize the GPU sector. “A lot of people have been hesitant to commit to a discrete GPU. They don't see the pay off or the value. Intel will be a security blanket for them,” he says.
On his regular reports on the GPU business, he says, “Forecasting has never been more challenging, and as a result, our forecast and others’ will get revised frequently as new data appears.”
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Kenneth WongKenneth Wong is Digital Engineering’s resident blogger and senior editor. Email him at [email protected] or share your thoughts on this article at digitaleng.news/facebook.
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