crazycrave
[H]ard|Gawd
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2016
- Messages
- 1,615
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Its permanent. Time to move on.
Even if I won the newegg shuffle there page link showed $899 for there Zotec RTX 3070 holo that there store was selling for $879 .. Not that I wanted an Nvidia card after being AMD for ever but it's something new to me if I keep the card or not as to be 2080Ti like would be something to see for under $1200 .. so keep that in mind as the 2080Ti set the higher prices were seeing .
I got the Zotec 3070 Holo installed and running great .. says it's 24% faster in Firestrike then my RX5700 on same system.I think the Shuffle prices for LHR 3060 Ti's are good, $540-580 typically. The higher end cards maybe not so much.
Yeah, but who wants to get the other stuff that's part of each bundle?I think the Shuffle prices for LHR 3060 Ti's are good, $540-580 typically. The higher end cards maybe not so much.
As long as GPU mining is a thing, and is profitable for miners, I expect it to be permanent.
GPU mining has turned GPUs into investments. They are subject to the same forces that govern investments, like risk and profitability. Not just availability.
One poster compared mining to picking up a $20 bill on the sidewalk. If walking into a store and buying a GPU at msrp is easy money, it won't stay easy money for long. The price will go up accordingly.
The only scenario where GPU prices fall is where GPU mineable cryptocurrency crashes in price.
If you are the CEO of NVidia or AMD, a big part of your total "compensation package" is related to the stock price. And the stock price is usually affected by revenue growth and profits. So what do you think those CEOs are going to do?This is not a mining issue...it is a loyalty to customer issue.
Miners can't get these in bulk unless somebody is willing to forego the customer loyalty to sell them in bulk to miners.
After watching that MicroCenter video above (which is over a year old by the way) you can see why things are the way they are.
If you are the CEO of NVidia or AMD, a big part of your total "compensation package" is related to the stock price. And the stock price is usually affected by revenue growth and profits. So what do you think those CEOs are going to do?
Market manipulation at its finest.Stop making cards![]()
Market manipulation at its finest.
The worst of capitalism, which is only as good as the people behind it.
FTFYMarket manipulation at its finest.
The worst of Corporatism, which is only as good as the people behind it.
Yeah, but who wants to get the other stuff that's part of each bundle?
I have seen a few good deals with combo's and I could used an extar mother board .They have a solo 3060 Ti almost every day.
I don't know, with expedited shipping, you could probably sell at least a hundred of them for $3000/each. (Merry Christmas!)Looks like some people may have got the five finger discount on some 3070s.
Looks like some people may have got the five finger discount on some 3070s.
Exactly. The manufacturers shipped more GPUs in Q3 this year than any prior. This is 100% the demand problem. And the worst part is its insatiable so no amount of supply increase will fix it.and this is the kind of BS that people claim doesn't exist.. This is small scale operation.. and just some "regular Joe"... Humans by nature are greedy... this is going on by the magnitude of the thousands.. and thousands.. and you tell me Mining isn't the reason on the GPU shortages... GTFO lmao
Looks like some people may have got the five finger discount on some 3070s.
why is nVidia selling in large quantities directly to miners?
why is nVidia selling in large quantities directly to miners?
One sale, one invoice, one shipment, one paycheck.
If you have a bakery that makes 500 loaves of bread a day, wouldn't you rather sell all 500 to a sandwich shop and take the rest of the day off, rather than sell each loaf separately to 500 customers?
On top of that, the sandwich shop is willing to give an 10 percent over retail if you sell them all 500. What would you do?
But, if you're a business person, you know that you've probably just killed your business. Not saying that such manipulation can't occur, but when it does, usually it's to take you down.One sale, one invoice, one shipment, one paycheck.
If you have a bakery that makes 500 loaves of bread a day, wouldn't you rather sell all 500 to a sandwich shop and take the rest of the day off, rather than sell each loaf separately to 500 customers?
On top of that, the sandwich shop is willing to give an 10 percent over retail if you sell them all 500. What would you do?
But, if you're a business person, you know that you've probably just killed your business. Not saying that such manipulation can't occur, but when it does, usually it's to take you down.
Nobody will ever go to "sandwich shop" again because they never have any sandwiches, etc.
Growth. Well, if it's broad, growth is fine. But when it's just one, you may need to create a one off scenario (test it for a bit, build up a cash buffer). You have to keep "sandwich shop" a real shop. The lifetime of the "500 loaves a day" customer might not be forever. Might not last a month. I'd be very cautious.
Sorry, I mean, I get the "logic" of what you said. But I also get the "illogic" as well.
Btw, while we're talking sandwiches, the above scenario did really happen during the cryto mining card craze. Some distributors were not prepared to deal with the spike and the return to planet earth. Not to mention supply issues.
Sorry, I mean, I get the "logic" of what you said. But I also get the "illogic" as well.
I'm sorry to be the barer of bad news, but this is the new normal.
What are you going to do? Get your GPUs from someone else?
It will be until Intel starts selling 3070 equivalents at a loss to gain market share. They're going to push crazy hard with I+I packages to compete with A+A, and at that point, Nvidia will have to become a more consumer-focused company, or shift their market to suit more directly suit mining and datacenter.
As I said earlier: Nvidia will most likely reduce production in order hold their current demand-to-supply ratio. Competition COULD change this, but that competition would have to be willing to leave money on the table in order to get market share.I mean, that will ultimately be one of two things that help resolve the situation.
Increased FAB capacity will eventually come on line, allowing AMD Nvidia and Intel to all put more product in the giving people more of a choice.
With a little luck, SEC's push to regulate cryptocurrencies as securities, and other nations following suit will also cause crypto mining to become less profitable in the not too distant future, putting a damper on that demand as well.
I know I've put off buying anything for a long time now. Eventually, this impacts the whole "system". Why is my new big big big game not selling? Answer: Nobody has the big big card to play it. What the game producer hears: They didn't like it (sells the company).Once again I'm telling you: This is the new normal.
I completely agree. But as long as there are players willing to pay: that Golf course is probably rolling in cash, and to corporate greed, that is all that matters.I know I've put off buying anything for a long time now. Eventually, this impacts the whole "system". Why is my new big big big game not selling? Answer: Nobody has the big big card to play it. What the game producer hears: They didn't like it (sells the company).
You might like golf, but if you have to pay $100,000/yr. in greens fees, you'll find something else to do.
Unfortunately, Intel being in the game changes VERY little. If Intel sells GPUs at low prices, scalpers will buy them up and sell for more market-matching prices.
While I hope you're right, I also know Intel is not in quite a monopolistic position as they once were. the rise of AMD, Nvidia, TSMC, Samsung, ARM etc are all smaller, but very competent competitors essentially acting like piranhas eating up Intel's markets one little bite at a time. Intel does not control the industry like they once did.This is way less likely with Intel. Nvidia is a velvet glove when it comes to mining and scalping. Intel is an iron fist, and they're got lots of experience setting prices and controlling markets. They are masters of all the dirty tricks, we've seen them fix markets before, and we've seen them take fines from governments like it's nothing to them -- because they're nothing to them.
I guess what I'm saying is that "gaming wise", the current selling strategy can be destructive. You can overplay your hand with regards to greed and create a "no market" situation. But time will tell.I completely agree. But as long as there are players willing to pay: that Golf course is probably rolling in cash, and to corporate greed, that is all that matters.
You may have put off buying a GPU, but Nvidia is still selling every chip they can manufacture. Your willingness to pay these prices has not mattered at all to them. and until the number of people willing to pay these prices dies down, they will continue to sell and continue to justify the current pricing.
I don't like it, but that's how it is.
This is not a sandwich shop, this is a multi billion dollar GPU company. If I can't get my shipment of 10k GPU's from them this year doesn't mean I'm not going to try again next year and next year (assuming the performance/cost is good for the market).Nobody will ever go to "sandwich shop" again because they never have any sandwiches, etc.
Well.. in theory if Intel brought a lot of supply to the market prices WILL go down. However, that is theory. And anyways last I heard Intel is using TSMC for GPUs (rumor). So if they bring in GPU's from TSMC's constrained supply this wont really help anyways (still supply constrained, no change there).Unfortunately, Intel being in the game changes VERY little. If Intel sells GPUs at low prices, scalpers will buy them up and sell for more market-matching prices.
Maybe. I mean Intel doesn't really gain anything by trying to force lower prices. If the cards sell out at higher prices anyways then they are just losing profit.This is way less likely with Intel. Nvidia is a velvet glove when it comes to mining and scalping. Intel is an iron fist, and they're got lots of experience setting prices and controlling markets. They are masters of all the dirty tricks, we've seen them fix markets before, and we've seen them take fines from governments like it's nothing to them -- because they're nothing to them.
Maybe. I mean Intel doesn't really gain anything by trying to force lower prices. If the cards sell out at higher prices anyways then they are just losing profit.
I wish I shared your optimism.Intel has a long history of making deals and selling products at a loss in order to maintain, retain, and grow market share. They don't care about profits today, they want people to buy their stuff no matter what.
AMD and Nvidia know they can only keep these prices high as long as they're not competing against Intel, then all bets are off. Intel doesn't care if they don't make money; they're not making any money already right now. If AMD and Nvidia don't address the consumer market, Intel will make sure they're synonymous with gaming for 2022, and then all that hard work will evaporate.
AMD and Nvidia are putting away large profits right now, but that money is for a rainy day, and the clouds are rolling in.
If they sell out at MSRP, above MSRP, or below MSRP its all the same marketshare.Intel has a long history of making deals and selling products at a loss in order to maintain, retain, and grow market share. They don't care about profits today, they want people to buy their stuff no matter what.
AMD and Nvidia know they can only keep these prices high as long as they're not competing against Intel, then all bets are off. Intel doesn't care if they don't make money; they're not making any money already right now. If AMD and Nvidia don't address the consumer market, Intel will make sure they're synonymous with gaming for 2022, and then all that hard work will evaporate.
AMD and Nvidia are putting away large profits right now, but that money is for a rainy day, and the clouds are rolling in.