Wednesday, September 6th 2023
AIB Shipments Climb in Q2 2023, with Unit Sales Increasing Q2Q
According to a new research report from the analyst firm Jon Peddie Research (JPR), unit shipments in the add-in board (AIB) market increased in Q2'23 from last quarter, while AMD gained market share. Quarter to quarter, graphics AIB shipments increased modestly, by 2.9%; however, shipments decreased by -36% year to year.
Since Q1 2000, over 2.10 billion graphics cards, worth about $476 billion, have been sold. The market shares for the desktop discrete GPU suppliers shifted in the quarter, as AMD's market share increased from last quarter and Nvidia's share increased from last year. Intel, which entered the AIB market in Q3'22 with the Arc A770 and A750, will start to increase market share in 2024.Quick Highlights
C. Robert Dow, analyst at JPR, noted, "Q2'23 provided us with indications that this market is finally stabilizing. Nvidia's gaming revenue was up 22% from a year ago, and AMD expects gaming revenue to rebound in the second half of 2023. Nvidia introduced the RTX 4060 Ti and RTX 4060 midrange boards, with AMD set to release midrange versions of its 7000 series. The midrange segment is historically the most popular with gamers, so we should see good numbers for the rest of 2023."
JPR has been tracking AIB shipments quarterly since 1987—the volume of those boards peaked in 1998, reaching 116 million units. The AIB market reached $19,407.2 million in the last four quarters. We forecast the AIB market to grow by 7% over the next three years.
Source:
Jon Peddie Research
Since Q1 2000, over 2.10 billion graphics cards, worth about $476 billion, have been sold. The market shares for the desktop discrete GPU suppliers shifted in the quarter, as AMD's market share increased from last quarter and Nvidia's share increased from last year. Intel, which entered the AIB market in Q3'22 with the Arc A770 and A750, will start to increase market share in 2024.Quick Highlights
- JPR found that AIB shipments during the quarter increased from the last quarter by 2.9%, which is above the 10-year average of -9.7%.
- Total AIB shipments decreased by -36.3% from this quarter last year to 6.4 million units, yet were up from 6.26 million units last quarter.
- AMD's quarter-to-quarter total desktop AIB unit shipments increased 46.8% from quarter to quarter and decreased -48.7% from last year.
- Nvidia's quarter-to-quarter unit shipments decreased -1.4% and decreased -34.8% from the previous year. Nvidia continues to hold a dominant market share position at 80.2%.
C. Robert Dow, analyst at JPR, noted, "Q2'23 provided us with indications that this market is finally stabilizing. Nvidia's gaming revenue was up 22% from a year ago, and AMD expects gaming revenue to rebound in the second half of 2023. Nvidia introduced the RTX 4060 Ti and RTX 4060 midrange boards, with AMD set to release midrange versions of its 7000 series. The midrange segment is historically the most popular with gamers, so we should see good numbers for the rest of 2023."
JPR has been tracking AIB shipments quarterly since 1987—the volume of those boards peaked in 1998, reaching 116 million units. The AIB market reached $19,407.2 million in the last four quarters. We forecast the AIB market to grow by 7% over the next three years.
5 Comments on AIB Shipments Climb in Q2 2023, with Unit Sales Increasing Q2Q
Nvidia cut production of Ampere early in the year, and outside the 4090 and 4070 the critics have universally panned the 40-series as overpriced crap. The 4070 is decent but $600 is too expensive for it to have any real impact on market share, so the drop in that is down to Ampere stocks drying up.
AMD's strong 6000-series sales with competitive performance/$ and a VRAM advantage during a year where inadequate VRAM on Nvidia cards has been a hot topic for almost every AAA release. I don't know if RDNA2 is still in production, but it's definitely still available in stores just about everywhere.
www.jonpeddie.com/store/add-in-board-report-a-report-on-the-graphic-add-in-board-market/