Thursday, September 4th 2014
NVIDIA Tweaking GeForce GTX 770 Price to Compete with R9 285
NVIDIA's response to AMD Radeon R9 285 isn't major (a new product launch). The company believes it already has the products out there to take on it. The company is likely working with add-in card partners, and retailers, to tweak pricing of its performance-segment GeForce GTX 770 2GB, bringing its price around the US $275 mark, $25 more than the cheapest R9 285, and roughly the same price as factory-overclocked ones. Its pricing is down from the $325 point it was hovering over.
The GTX 770 costs roughly the same as the GTX 760, for NVIDIA to sell, with the former only imposing slightly higher VRM requirements. Our tests show that the GTX 770 still ends up with better energy efficiency figures than the R9 285. Based on the 28 nm "GK104" silicon, the GTX 770 packs 1,536 CUDA cores, 128 TMUs, 32 ROPs, and a 256-bit wide GDDR5 memory interface.
The GTX 770 costs roughly the same as the GTX 760, for NVIDIA to sell, with the former only imposing slightly higher VRM requirements. Our tests show that the GTX 770 still ends up with better energy efficiency figures than the R9 285. Based on the 28 nm "GK104" silicon, the GTX 770 packs 1,536 CUDA cores, 128 TMUs, 32 ROPs, and a 256-bit wide GDDR5 memory interface.
39 Comments on NVIDIA Tweaking GeForce GTX 770 Price to Compete with R9 285
The prosaic and likely answer is, with the GTX 980/970 incoming, Nvidia are looking to align prices ahead of the launch and/or clear inventory if the 970 (or possibly a GTX 960 Ti ?) EOL's the 770.
The company generally doesn't lower prices on a whim, and since the 285 doesn't bring anything new to the table on performance or pricing (given current R9 280 prices), the obvious alternative is an inventory clearance. If the company were looking at some kind of price vs. performance metric you'd think that the GTX 760 might be the one getting the price cut.
For starters the 285 is a better 7950 and does show improvements over the dated Tahiti cores. With that in mind the card in many tests competes with the 770 all the while costing less which makes it more attractive to budget consumers (since the 280 is moving out even though it's the best buy atm).
Next you have the 9XX series release and depending on where nvidia intends to release the 980 core (probably 600+ based on some other price changes) they have to adjust things accordingly. If prices do not fall in line whether people will buy them then they will not get purchased.
Factor those together and you get a price change. It's no surprise and I bet we are going to see a lot more around the corner (I've already seen 780ti cards for ~550). The R9 285 is no game changer, but the improvements on the platform is enough to cause for some changes necessary for proper competition.
Why are you so negative towards this launch?
285 offers 12.8% better performancethan the 280 for a 25% increasein price - in factNewegg's pricing says the majority of R9 280'shave a better price/performance ratio than the 285 Well if you need "certain applications" then all well and good - you look hard enough and most cards have at least one selling point, but the majority of people use it for gaming in general - and in general 12.8% more performance for a 25% hike in price doesn't make it a star, especially since power consumption hasn't really been addressed and AMD quietly slipped in a decrease in double precision from 1:4 with the R9 280 to 1:16 with the R9 285 - no doubt other people have use for FP64 for "certain applications", because it apparently matters to you too...so do you consider the 285's 75% reduction in double precision some kind of selling point? So what is it, important, or just important when it suits your current argument? I'm actually less negative about the launch than I am about condescending hypocrites , but in general, if a company launches a card with an inferior price/performance metric than the card it is replacing, then I don't consider it a success...so I consider that less "confused" than a realistic interpretation of the current situation. Feel free to wax on about colour compression, true audio, and whatever else is the current buzz phrase Sunnyvale is spoon feeding the masses - but unless it has tangible benefits for the majority of the user base its actual value isn't that pertinent.
Locally, in New Zealand, there is actually a premium attached to AMD cards compared to the U.S. Well, there are enough design tweaks to consider Tonga an evolution of Tahiti I think rather than a rebrand, and I wouldn't consider the GTX 770 a "new" GPU since it is the same GK104 that the GTX 680 uses - improved memory controller aside.
Nvidia
Sales* 4.40 Bil
Income* 530.14 Mil
Sales Growth* -3.50%
Income Growth* -21.80%
Net Profit Margin 12.04%
Debt/Equity Ratio 0.32
Beta 1.73
EPS 0.92
Forward P/E 15.17
P/E 21.42
Market Cap 10.67 Bil
AMD
Sales* 5.89 Bil
Income* 81.00 Mil
Sales Growth* -2.30%
Income Growth* NA
Net Profit Margin 1.38%
Debt/Equity Ratio 0.20
Beta 2.64
EPS 0.11
Forward P/E 20.32
P/E 39.29
Market Cap 3.22 Bil
AMD had greater sales but look at the profit margin for each company. imo Nvidia charges too much for their product and AMD charges too little. Hopefully things will look up for AMD from newgen console sales if they are charging Sony and MS enough for their chips.
It is a replacement not a rebrand.
It has all the tech of Hawaii and additional improvements in tesselation and some special sauce frame buffer lossless compression. That compression allows a higher Pixel fill rate than the 280 despite narrower bus.
GTX770 comes down in price because it has competition from 280x and 285 ...
techreport.com/review/26997/amd-radeon-r9-285-graphics-card-reviewed/4
Sales* 53.91 Bil
Income* 10.30 Bil
Sales Growth* -1.20%
Income Growth* -12.60%
Net Profit Margin 19.11%
Debt/Equity Ratio 0.22
Beta 0.91
EPS 2.02
Forward P/E 14.91
P/E 17.38
Market Cap 173.19 Bil
Shares Outstanding 4.95 Bil
AMD simply charges too little and has very little to spend on R&D.
I wonder how long it would talk to see price drops in the UK.
The 770 is what Nvidia will make "their last stand" until a 960 is released (?). Nvidia probably can't bring themselves to work the margins of GK104's selling at $200-220, the 760 will just fade quickly being squeezed by the 270X-285. Rather than castrating chips for little profit... the 770 is manning the mainstream. But therein lies their predicament, a gaping hole between again a pricey GTX750Ti and the GTX770. AMD has cards positioned all throughout, at the low end 260X spars with GTX750Ti for less, while the 280X is easily found less than its' $300 MSRP. Sure W1zzard may show a 770 above the 280X, more often many reviews have them trading blows (title specific) more than what such a "summary" implies.
So, yes Nvidia finally compelled to be competitive... While I'm sure most of us can invision well before Black Friday or folk buying Christmas presents AMD will have the 285 at around $210-220 (deals and rebates), so this has no bearing on what the 285 is doing, and conversely more about what Nvidia is/isn’t… in the market.
Its pretty obvious that prices have to change in accordance with the way things are going. This month alot of changes are coming to the GPU lineups so its apparent that price adjustments were in order.
Give some of that money to AMD so they can put towards R&D too make better CPU's :roll::roll:
But you're right, Nvidia are clearly doomed as the discrete graphics market share clearly show - and there is no possible way that the imminent release of the Maxwell based cards will alter the companies prospects...even with Rory Read pronouncing that "AMD still has to get through 18 months of old technology before the new chips are available" - I guess either Nvidia really are in the toilet or your predictions are as accurate as usual
Ah, the long term view - don't worry about now because
WinterChristmas is coming. You can invision a change in AMD circumstance, but assume the competition will be standing still. You really need to hoof it Sunnyvale with your resume - this is just the exactly kind of management outlook that put AMD's CPU business in the driving seat.