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The blood loss continues in the graphics card market: Sales hit the bottom

Demand problems in the consumer market continue to affect the PC market, especially the graphics card. According to the latest Jon Peddie Research (JPR) report, there was a significant decrease in graphics card shipments in the first quarter of the year. Alright ...
 The blood loss continues in the graphics card market: Sales hit the bottom
READING NOW The blood loss continues in the graphics card market: Sales hit the bottom
Demand problems in the consumer market continue to affect the PC market, especially the graphics card. According to the latest Jon Peddie Research (JPR) report, there was a significant decrease in graphics card shipments in the first quarter of the year. So how is the situation in the market? Let’s look at the details together.

The blood loss continues in the graphics card market

According to the research on the first quarter of 2023, graphics card shipments reached a total of 54.8 million, with a decrease of 14 percent from quarter to quarter. According to JPR, this figure is 6.1 percent, well below the 10-year average. On the other hand, laptop GPU shipments fell 45 percent, while desktop GPUs fell 40 percent year-over-year and 12.6 percent last quarter.

We can say that the name most affected by this pause was Intel. The CPU giant saw the biggest drop in quarterly GPU shipments, down 17.5 percent from the previous quarter. On the other hand, AMD shipments fell 7.8 percent QoQ, while Nvidia shipments fell 4.1 percent, respectively. However, in the market share, Intel increased by 2.9 percent, AMD by 0.9 percent and Nvidia by 1.96 percent.

As for processor shipments, according to Jon Peddie Research’s report, there was a decrease of 15.6 percent in the last quarter and 38.8 percent on an annual basis. There was no change in the tablet market. In addition, JPR shared its shipment forecasts for the rest of 2023. Accordingly, low sales will continue until the third quarter of the year. However, it is stated that there will be a cautious but slight rise at the beginning of the third and fourth quarters.

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