GPU sales spike by 20%, fuelled by crypto-currency miners and laptop sales

Hope that shift in crypto-currency may render GPU-based mining obsolete

Credit: Dreamstime

GPU sales grew an astounding 20 per cent at the end of 2020, spurred by pandemic-induced gaming, a new mining craze, and huge demand for laptops, according to a new report from Jon Peddie Research.

But there’s a light at the end the tunnel - for gamers, at least. The GPU-based crypto-currency craze, which has consumed the already limited supplies of cards with the speed and mercilessness of locusts, just might go bust.

Jon Peddie of JPR, who has followed the graphics market for more than three decades, said the new variant of Ethereum is likely to kill the cost-effectiveness of using GPUs.

“Ethereum, the best-suited coin for GPUs, will fork into version 2.0 very soon, making GPUs obsolete,” he explained. “A person would be very foolish to invest in a high-end, power-consuming AIB [add-in-board, in this case a discrete graphics card] for crypto-mining today.”

Still, the demand for PCs and gaming GPUs led to pretty phenomenal growth in 2020, JPR said. Much of the growth in 2020 predictably started in the third quarter, during the traditional back-to-school shopping season. With many students still attending virtual classes, computers were even hotter commodities that they had been earlier in the year, when the pandemic shutdown first drove people indoors.

That strong third quarter likely created momentum going into the fourth quarter. Citing percentages of growth rather than unit quantities, the research firm said the fourth quarter saw a 20.5 per cent increase in GPU units shipped. AMD and Intel benefited the most - their GPU shipments increased 6.4 per cent and 33.2 per cent, respectively. The total GPU units shipped for all of 2020 increased 12.4 per cent year over year.

JPR doesn't say exactly how many or what kinds of GPU shipped, but it seems likely that AMD and Intel graphics cores integrated with the companies' mobile CPUs made up the biggest chunk. Discrete GPU maker Nvidia's shipments actually decreased by 7.3 per cent in the same quarter, another indication that AMD/Intel integrated graphics led the surge.

Don't feel too sorry for Nvidia, though. The company actually saw its share of the discrete graphics market grow to 82 per cent for the last quarter of 2020, versus its 73 per cent share in Q4 2019.

Intel still has no presence in true discrete graphics, so those numbers mean AMD saw its share shrink to 18 per cent, from the 27 per cent share it held in the last quarter of 2019.

All enthusiasts care about is discrete graphics cards sales - none of this muddying with mobile graphics. JPR is expected to release a more focused look at desktop add-in-boards sales in the near future, so stay tuned for that.

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Gordon Mah Ung

Gordon Mah Ung

PC World (US online)
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