Mockingbird
Senior member
- Feb 12, 2017
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But AMD is also trying to take a larger piece of the market, which means expanding their own production volume. In order to entice new customers to purchase AMD CPUs, they naturally have to reduce their price.
There might be a particular stable price at which AMD can sell some number of CPUs, but if they want to sell twice or three times that number of CPUs then the only way to do so is at a lower price.
AMDs new chiplet strategy is going to allow them to produce a greater number of CPUs and to be more nimble in adapting to small changes and shifts in the market since the same chiplet can just as easily be used to make more server chips if demand is strong there, but shifted back to desktop parts if the server market weakens.
Further, the market rate for some product doesn't mean that AMD is necessarily seeing additional profit. During the mining boom, it was the retailers and people flipping cards who were absorbing a lot of the additional profit. Both AMD and NVidia may have seen additional sales, but they were not receiving all of the benefits of those additional sales.
Let's say that AMD's $200 processor costs $50 to make. (not including development cost)
Now, AMD cut the price in half to $100.
Are you telling me that AMD is going to sell at least 3 times as many processors at $100 as it would have at $200?
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