Wednesday, February 7th 2024

AMD Radeon RX 7700 XT Pricing Slides Down to Under $355, Threatening RTX 4060 Ti and RX 7600 XT

Retailer specific discounts are creating quite the pileup of graphics card options between the $300 to $500 mark. With enough time spent finding the right deal, you could potentially buy a much faster graphics card that you'd planned for, at a given price. Hot on the heels on a recent Best Buy deal that brought the GeForce RTX 4060 Ti 8 GB down to $344, or within just $15 of the Radeon RX 7600 XT, we're hearing about a couple of Newegg deals that see the Radeon RX 7700 XT down to just $353, or $9 more than the RTX 4060 Ti, and $24 more than an RX 7600 XT.

At $353, the RX 7700 XT changes the game, as it is a firmly 1440p-class GPU, compared to the 1080p-class RTX 4060 Ti and RX 7600 XT. In our testing, the Radeon RX 7700 XT is an incredible 17% faster than the RTX 4060 Ti at 1080p for just $9 more; and 19% faster than it at 1440p. Compared to the RX 7600 XT, the RX 7700 XT is a staggering 39% faster at 1080p, and 44% faster at 1440p. Even with ray tracing enabled, the RX 7700 XT dominates the RTX 4060 Ti. At 1080p with ray tracing enabled, the RTX 4060 Ti averages just 2% faster than the RX 7700 XT, but at 1440p, the RX 7700 XT in fact ends up 14% faster than the RTX 4060 Ti thanks to its much heavier SIMD engine, and 50% higher memory bandwidth. The Newegg deal doesn't even cover a cheap custom design, but the mighty PowerColor RX 7700 XT Hellhound and Fighter.
Source: VideoCardz
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66 Comments on AMD Radeon RX 7700 XT Pricing Slides Down to Under $355, Threatening RTX 4060 Ti and RX 7600 XT

#51
Random_User
Tek-CheckNot at the moment. It's not their priority. They have limited access to latest silicon at TSMC, as everybody wants the access, including Intel, alongside Apple, Nvidia, Qualcomm, Broadcom, MediaTek, etc. They have more profitable data center CPUs, APUs and GPUs to attend to, plus contracts for gaming APUs. It's obviously more profitable to dedicate more silicon to client CPUs, especially EPYC and Instinct where margins are crazy than offer it to pesky gamers for 10 or 20 times less money.
This might be the wishful thinking. But It seems it's good time for AMD to think about own foundry business. Maybe even bringing back some of the US and Dresden foundries, and package facilities that became GloFo, and get some piece of chip funding pie. That would surely benefit more than intel wasting the billions on own offshore plants, and useless strategy.

Yes, it's not necessary for the chip manufacturer company, that designs them, to have a foundry as well. As this is very risky and needs significant, rather huge amount of money. But AMD is not nVidia with trillions of bucks, and they have a special place in the semiconductor industry, on contrary to it's direct rivals, such as nVidia and intel.
AMD cannot, or doesn't want to pay the prices for more fab allocation, needed for better availability of consumer products. This might be the one of the reasons of such unwilling behavior towards consumer market. So AMD has to choose between the very limited allocation either for most and least profitable products/branches.
Maybe if they had cheaper or less restrict fab capacity, there would be the chance for more consumer products.
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#52
Craptacular
FiredropsIt has been about datacenter/ML for a long time, it was completely obvious to everyone, including AMD. AMD kept making ROCm announcements since 2016, which are completely detached from their actual progress. 7 years of ROCm "work" got completely and utterly left in the dust by 7 months of Intel's openVINO/IPEX team in both performance and compatibility. Even today, in Linux, using officially supported 7900XT/X, ROCm doesn't even support important libraries used in Oobabooga. For all real world intents and purposes, ROCm is still nowhere in sight. I'm keen to see how they win datacenter/ML relevance like that.
With regards to ROCm and 7900 xtx, if I'm not mistaken AMD's priority has been with the CDNA GPUs with regards to ROCm and not with the RDNA lineup.
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#53
MarsM4N
nguyenWell no RDNA3 beside the 7900XTX show up in Steam Hardware Survey, let hope the massive price cut change that
Not even the 7800 XT is showing up at Steam's Hardware Survey (Jan 2024), which btw. sold at least more than 2x as the 7900 XTX. Also did you notice the positions in the Steam Hardware Survey: "AMD Radeon Graphics", "AMD Radeon(TM) Graphics" (2x), "AMD AMD Custom GPU 0405"? ;) What does this tell us? Steam most likely isn't recognizing AMD GPU's correctly or mis-labeling them on purpose.
nguyenThe hardware survey being published every month only collect data on the second day of every month, I got surveyed maybe once a year
I got maybe 3 Steam surveys. In a span of ~19 years I am on Steam. :laugh:
3valatzyShe can definitely perform better.
Let's look at the overall discrete graphics market share:
Nvidia: 80.2%; AMD: 17%; intel: 2%
The all-time low for AMD is 10% but also the all time high is over 40%.
Sure they could do better, but atm. Nvidia is just on a very strong run. :) On the other side the RDNA chiplet approach could turn things around in the upcoming years, maybe not in the performance king crown league but in cost efficiency, giving them the option to battle Nvidia by price. When looking at the DIY CPU sale numbers the game can change pretty fast in favour for AMD, if they can get the chiplets to really shine. Also the 7000 Series is their first chiplet approach, so there is a lot of headroom to improve. It's a long game and changes often only pay off with the 2nd or 3rd generation. Especially at AMD.
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#54
Totally
DavenDude, the stock is up 600% OVER five years. That means the stock price today is 600% higher not the stock price five years ago. Its also the highest TODAY than ever in AMD history. But its nice to have another AMD attacker to debate. More recent ones don’t last long. By the way, a CEO is not fired because the competition is also doing well. That makes no sense especially in a market with so few players.
Not true it peaked @$158 in 2021 which is $180 in today's dollars, also adjusting for inflation the stock's value is 495% higher than it was 5 years ago but as other pointed out that is misleading because the stock fell over 66% from when it peaked 2 years ago and still hasn't recovered.
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#55
nikoya
AnarchoPrimitivIt's funny, but for years I wanted to be a part of the steam hardware survey, especially with my all AMD builds, never got an invitation, Yet, just a week or so ago, my AIO kicked the bucket (enermax....
my friend's AIO leaked 2 weeks ago too, he had to change mobo, ram and cooler. his rig was like 2 years or so. quite high end setup. 3090 is ok.

I think its not a bad idea to come back to air instead of aio for CPU, when you consider it. the aio should be on the GPU not on the CPU. my GPU is 450W and my CPU 30-60W. while my aio is mostly idle, my GPU is choking hot air in the case.

just to say, I wish the GPU and AIO makers would agree to create a new OEM standard compatible multi-GPU-AIO
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#56
qcmadness
TotallyNot true it peaked @$158 in 2021 which is $180 in today's dollars, also adjusting for inflation the stock's value is 495% higher than it was 5 years ago but as other pointed out that is misleading because the stock fell over 66% from when it peaked 2 years ago and still hasn't recovered.
You have to consider the fact that the stock was "diluted" by 35-40% when AMD acquired Xilinx with extra stock issued
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#57
AusWolf
MarsM4NNot even the 7800 XT is showing up at Steam's Hardware Survey (Jan 2024), which btw. sold at least more than 2x as the 7900 XTX. Also did you notice the positions in the Steam Hardware Survey: "AMD Radeon Graphics", "AMD Radeon(TM) Graphics" (2x), "AMD AMD Custom GPU 0405"? ;) What does this tell us? Steam most likely isn't recognizing AMD GPU's correctly or mis-labeling them on purpose.


I got maybe 3 Steam surveys. In a span of ~19 years I am on Steam. :laugh:


Sure they could do better, but atm. Nvidia is just on a very strong run. :) On the other side the RDNA chiplet approach could turn things around in the upcoming years, maybe not in the performance king crown league but in cost efficiency, giving them the option to battle Nvidia by price. When looking at the DIY CPU sale numbers the game can change pretty fast in favour for AMD, if they can get the chiplets to really shine. Also the 7000 Series is their first chiplet approach, so there is a lot of headroom to improve. It's a long game and changes often only pay off with the 2nd or 3rd generation. Especially at AMD.
AMD Radeon (TM) Graphics could be the Zen 4 iGPU, because it's called that in the device manager and GPU-Z. It is also possible that it's detected as the primary GPU in the Steam survey, and whatever is in the PCI-e slot isn't.
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#58
Totally
qcmadnessYou have to consider the fact that the stock was "diluted" by 35-40% when AMD acquired Xilinx with extra stock issued
Doesn't matter IMO, if I were liquidate all my AMD stock I would have less of not the same buying buy than if I had liquidated back then. The stock is trending higher because the dollar is worth less, not because the value of the stock increased.
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#59
wheresmycar
FiredropsAlways too little too late. How is Lisa Su not fired yet? 3 years of abysmal execution and Radeon brand tarnishing.

EDIT: Lol at everyone who can't differentiate between CPU and GPU side, cherry picking timeframes, and not normalizing for sector wide movements.
I dunno about "too little too late" but GPU prices have been horrendously inflated and mostly stagnant across the board from the Get-go. AMD still has some reasonably priced "fill-the-gap" tasters with the likes of 10GB-6700, 12GB-6700XT/6750XT, surprisingly still selling and hopefully further price cut action to follow. Wasn't the initial perception AMD was willy nilly sticking to its 7000-series inflated guns to drain 6000-series cards? With the 7700XT at $350 my first impressions being previous Gen (same perf segment) is finally running on low stock, a good pretext to gear up production for the 7700XT (or release intentionally induced excess inventory).

'Lisa Su and being fired for 3-year abysmal execution and brand tarnishing'; lol that sounds like Firedrops dropping delinquent fire bombs with consumer dissuasion for collateral damage. Oddly enough i didn't give a rats-arse about Radeon cards until these last (same timeframe) 2-3 years. 6000-7000-series being great alternatives to Nvidia's harshly inflated price segmenting and feature over-valuing.... for me RTX 30/40-series higher tier MSRPs were a "hold on a minute" rethink moment. Not sure whose laps the "brand tarnishing" falls onto but purely from my (gaming) perspective Nvidia's the bigger offender... although no-offense taken in the boardroom where oodles of market share exploitation and profit margins matter more.

Anyway, i'm glad the 7700XT is drilled down to $350 although i'm not confident retailers will quickly fall in line (anytime soon)... not with some of those 67'ers causing a riot.
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#60
redeye
FiredropsIt has been about datacenter/ML for a long time, it was completely obvious to everyone, including AMD. AMD kept making ROCm announcements since 2016, which are completely detached from their actual progress. 7 years of ROCm "work" got completely and utterly left in the dust by 7 months of Intel's openVINO/IPEX team in both performance and compatibility. Even today, in Linux, using officially supported 7900XT/X, ROCm doesn't even support important libraries used in Oobabooga. For all real world intents and purposes, ROCm is still nowhere in sight. I'm keen to see how they win datacenter/ML relevance like that.


If you want to parade your utter ignorance, Nvidia is up 1800% over the same 5 years. There's a reason I said 3 years, not 5, because Lisa Su did incredible work with Ryzen before that.

Past 3 years, AMD is up 100%, great! Nvidia is up 500% in the same time period. CEOs aren't retained for what they did 5 years ago. 3 years of underperformance is already beyond what most boards will tolerate.
so you have Nvidia stock, and use AMD products….


ya so… would rather pay 73.95% gross margins to Nvidia… or 47% gross margins to AMD… Btw Apple’s gross margins are 45.87%…

so apple can ”survive” on 45.87… why can Nvidia not do the same thing?… oh, stockholders… but if you are a customer) the product you want should have a low gross margin… budget-er product. and with Nvidia having 80% market share… 73.95 gross margin (is truly gross) is only good for the stockmarket/stock holders…
everybody “says” apple too expensive and they are buying fashion, sheeple, izombies, etc… but what about Nvidia? twice the price, 10fps extra!.(4090) i bought in to the hype with the gtx980 over gtx970… which was 50% more for 20% more…
Posted on Reply
#61
thesmokingman
redeyeso you have Nvidia stock, and use AMD products….


ya so… would rather pay 73.95% gross margins to Nvidia… or 47% gross margins to AMD… Btw Apple’s gross margins are 45.87%…

so apple can ”survive” on 45.87… why can Nvidia not do the same thing?… oh, stockholders… but if you are a customer) the product you want should have a low gross margin… budget-er product. and with Nvidia having 80% market share… 73.95 gross margin (is truly gross) is only good for the stockmarket/stock holders…
everybody “says” apple too expensive and they are buying fashion, sheeple, izombies, etc… but what about Nvidia? twice the price, 10fps extra!.(4090) i bought in to the hype with the gtx980 over gtx970… which was 50% more for 20% more…
I've seen it mentioned in a couple earnings statements like for ex. Tesla stating that they will not grow AI/Compute whilst feeding a suppliers 70% margin. The sudden rise of custom AI chips from the top 3 megacap AI companies is a direct result of the gouging. Talk about shooting oneself in the foot. If they had kept margins close the the already ridonkulous 50% margin for tech, the push for alternative suppliers would not be so ardent as it is by the big 3.
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#62
kapone32
AusWolfAMD Radeon (TM) Graphics could be the Zen 4 iGPU, because it's called that in the device manager and GPU-Z. It is also possible that it's detected as the primary GPU in the Steam survey, and whatever is in the PCI-e slot isn't.
All of those handhleds running Steam must have had an impact by now.
Posted on Reply
#63
Lew Zealand
wheresmycarAnyway, i'm glad the 7700XT is drilled down to $350 although i'm not confident retailers will quickly fall in line (anytime soon)... not with some of those 67'ers causing a riot.
Except it's not. The 7700 XT is $422 and that's the lowest it's been since the day after this news article was published.

Newegg did a 1-day discount as a seemingly very successful publicity stunt judging by this thread, and then prices went right back to where they were before. 3 months ago I bought a 7700 XT for $430 and there's a single model available for less today, by all of $8.

Nothing's changed.
Posted on Reply
#64
AusWolf
kapone32All of those handhleds running Steam must have had an impact by now.
It also depends on whether you get asked to take part in the survey or not, I guess. This is the biggest flaw of the Steam survey, imo. It's not automatic and it doesn't survey every Steam user.
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#65
DavidC1
AnarchoPrimitivIntel's $15-$17 Billion in the same time period and on the graphics side, AMD's probably less that $1 Billion had to go up against Nvidia's $5+ Billion. So, with Intel outspending AMD by a factor of 15x,
I know it's not on topic but most of Intel's spending is on it's fabs, because they are an IDM, unlike AMD/Nvidia. Makes sense? It's been a long time I checked, but probably 10 out of the 15 is for fabs, making R&D similar to Nvidia.
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