Gigabyte graphics card shipments to drop 20% in 2Q18
We mentioned a global drop in demand already, now things solidify as a surge in cryptocurrency mining demand is dragging down Gigabyte Technology's graphics card shipments in the second quarter, which are set to fall about 20% sequentially with average selling price (ASP) for such cards dropping 10%, according to the company.
At an investors conference held June 27, Gigabyte said its graphic card shipments for the second quarter are estimated at around one million units, down from 1.2 million of a quarter earlier, reports digitimes:
As it remains unclear as to when Nvidia will release its new GPU platform in the second half of 2018, Gigabyte can hardly assess its shipment momentum in the third and fourth quarters. Nevertheless, the firm still expects its annual earnings from graphic cards for 2018 to be higher than that a year earlier, bolstered by the much higher corresponding profits scored in the first half of the year than in 2017.
Before the crypto mining craze subsided abruptly in April 2018, Gigabyte maintained a hefty profitability scenario in the first quarter, with its net earnings for the quarter shooting up 91% sequentially and skyrocketing five-fold on year to NT$1.61 billion (US$52.75 million), a new quarterly high and even higher than net profits for the first half of 2017. Revenues for the first five months still surged 40% on year to NT$30.53 billion. As crypto mining graphic cards can hardly generate high gross margins amid the sustained weakness in demand, Gigabyte will focus more on promoting graphic cards for gaming devices in the second half of 2018, the company said.
Company statistics also indicate Gigabyte's revenue ratio for graphic cards hit a high of 49% in the first quarter of 2018, compared to 36% for motherboards and 15% for servers. But the ratio for servers already soared to 20% in the second quarter amid the declining graphics card shipment momentum. Meanwhile, Gigabyte's motherboard shipments reached 3.3 million units in first-quarter 2018, and 1.1 million units each for April and May, with second-quarter shipments likely to remain flat or increase slightly compared to the first quarter. The company expects its annual motherboard shipments to be in the same range of 12-13 million units as posted for 2017, instead of accomplishing a 10% annual growth estimated in early 2018. This is due mainly to a delay in the arrival of Intel's new-generation CPU platform, the company indicated.
Gigabyte has landed big orders from Yandex of Russia and Penguin Computing of the US for server products. This is expected to help push up the firm's 2018 server revenues by 20% on year.
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Thanks schmidtbag
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Well, when cryptocoin values drops even more... let's say to their real value - exactly ZERO - the videocard market will recover. Won't be fun for OEMs when gazillions of GPU's used for mining will flood the 2nd-hand market, but for the rest of us it will be nice.
That 1080Ti is waiting for me as well... somewhere ;-)
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Well i have had my 1080's for 2 years now and i most definitely will not be upgrading to the Ti versions. 1180 or bust.
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All they have to do to stop the mining issue is make dedicated cards for mining only, dont allow gaming gpus to do mining... PROBLEM SOLVED!
Stop making gpus do computing/mining.
Since DX10 times, GPU's are all now GPGPU's. We're probably not going back. The hardware wasn't designed for "mining", but it happens to be good for it(and other stuff as well). GPU = General Processing Unit
I think gaming cards are to nvidia what typewriters were to IBM in the 1960's. Nvidia seems more interested in AI than games, and I'm sure they smell the money in it.
I mean we have server and desktop cpus for a reason right?
Thats what firepro cards are for right?!
They do have server CPU's for a reason, and it's not to prevent people from gobbling up all the desktop CPU's.
They have different features to fill a different role, but desktop CPU's can still run the same software.
They do have Quadro, Tesla, and FirePro, but Geforce and Radeon can still run the same software.
See the problem?
Make different gpus... they use different gpus on the physics cards dont they and dedicate apu cards... why not dedicated hardware for mining... there is a way.
They DO have dedicated mining hardware. When a new coin comes along I think it's faster/easier to start making money using existing GPGPU's, rather than designing a new ASIC or FPGA powered device. At some point bitcoin mining shifted to ASIC's instead of GPU's. The same thing will probably happen with any cryptocurrency that lasts long enough to be worth investing the time/money to produce the ASIC's.
Video card manufacturers should be held accountable just like the memory companies just got sued for 8 billion dollars for doing the same thing!
I think Chinese government has their own agenda(like this and this) in fining RAM manufacturers not related to price fixing - it's not about making your iphone cheaper out of the goodness of their hearts.
I see the mining demand as just market forces at work. Demand goes up, prices rise - classic!
Nvidia's shareholders aren't in it to give me the cheapest gaming experience possible and just break even.
I don't see this kind of action bringing prices down anyway, and it might do the opposite.
I'll be as happy as everyone else if prices come back down, but I don't blame the GPU manufacturers or the miners for trying to take advantage of a new opportunity.
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I was looking at this one https://www.ebay.com/itm/MSI-NVIDIA-GeForce-GTX-1060-3gb-OC-Gddr5-MINT-in-Box/173383692114?epid=1582100212&hash=item285e792f52:g:GREAAOSwKJ9bNGKt
owner says "THESE CARDS WERE NOT USED FOR MINING!"
your thought? ebay says $165 for me.
Since they're 1060s, I believe the seller - those weren't as popular to miners. I think that seller has a pretty reasonable backstory.
Besides, even if it was for mining, I actually see that as a good thing. Most mining farms invested in making sure their parts ran cool and reliably, so even if they're OC'd, they'd probably in better condition than what you'd get from some random kid who has birthday money to upgrade.
So, I'd say that's a decent price. But, being 3GB models, you're going to want to make sure you've got a lot of fast RAM.