Tuesday, August 21st 2012
AMD Readies New Round of Radeon HD 7000 Series Price Cuts
AMD is working on a new set of price-cuts for its performance-thru-enthusiast lines of GPUs, following the launch of NVIDIA's GeForce GTX 660 Ti. The new pricing will take effect by the end of this week. The $299 GeForce GTX 660 Ti, as reviews show, offers higher performance per Dollar than Radeon HD 7870 GHz Edition, and punches above its weight, at the $349 Radeon HD 7950, prompting AMD to change its specifications by increasing core clock speed, and augmenting it with PowerTune with Boost. The resulting HD 7950 with Boost is bound to replace the older HD 7950.
When AMD's new pricing scheme takes effect, this is how the performance-enthusiast segment will shape up:
Source:
The TechReport
When AMD's new pricing scheme takes effect, this is how the performance-enthusiast segment will shape up:
- Prices of Radeon HD 7950 Boost will go down from US $349 to $319,
- Prices of Radeon HD 7870 GHz Edition will go down from $299 to $249,
- Prices of Radeon HD 7850 2GB will go down to $209, and HD 7850 1GB to $189.
45 Comments on AMD Readies New Round of Radeon HD 7000 Series Price Cuts
Hehe I might not be getting it, but I'd say a price war is exactly why they're lowering their prices right now.
The problem might be in public perception....AMD (seemingly near) constantly lowering prices makes them look reactive to Nvidia. Constant discounting isn't conducive to reinforcing the perception of a premiere brand. It also doesn't do a great deal to alter the reviews already in the public domain that were assessed at a higher price point. Not sure whether a few watts here or there makes a great deal of difference to the average buyer tbh It's only the consumers who want the price war. AMD and Nvidia would quite happily make a token price cut for some PR kudos...but only a token. Yup. AMD reacting to the market rather than dictating it. A simple formula:
AMD Market Strategy = Toilet It doesn't seem to be hurting Nvidia's balance sheet too much. Seems like an ideal way to move excess inventory of GTX560's for instance.
Mother of god...
7870 starts to look really good at that price.
i've had hoped they will make 7950 $300 :ohwell:.
7750 - €80
7770 - €110
(6850 - €110)
(6870 - €140)
7850 - €190
7870 - €200
7950 - €260
7970 - €350
The cheapest ones that is. The euro is a bit low now it's probably a bit more than that.
But then again for some reason the New Zealand retailers like to keep their prices hiked!
/Lives in Napier-buys on eBay
212mm2, this is the mid to low end card people. 130$ is too much.
Given the launch price of these cards, the 7950 lost 130$ and the 7970 lost 110$ in 4 months since the 670 appeared. I don't see this as a sign of business going well nor rebuilding a reputation that seem to lack for AMD. I mean, why buy AMD at launch when just waiting a few months will give one much better deals (plus better drivers...).
That being said, the 7950 is very competitive now at $320 for enthusiasts (out of the box for 1080p and average Joe the 660Ti is still a better deal) while the 7870 is competitive with 660Ti because NV has nothing under 250$ (a sweet spot). The 7850 was always alone and the best bang/buck in the AMD new lineup, I'm sure they sold many at 250$ but the price had to go down to make way for the 7870.
So, for those who were missing the action for the first part of the year, the right time for upgrade is just beginning.
They release their cards 6 months apart so BOTH companies are ontop at some point in the year.
They've been doing it for ages :laugh:
I'm not sure how we're drawing conclusions about one company sucking because their price dropped $100 in 4 months. This happens every generation...
The part we--as consumers--should be upset about is this "back and forth" business. If they released at the same time prices would start lower. The reason AMD and nVidia are able to charge high prices at launch is they're always competing against an aging product.