Mining

EVGA to Stop Making Graphics Cards After Ethereum Merge

EVGA, one of the largest manufacturers of graphics card add-in boards, announced late Friday that it is quitting the board business due to the bleak financial outlook in the sector post-Ethereum Merge and “mistreatment” from its partner Nvidia.

«EVGA will not carry the next generation graphics cards,» a company spokesperson said on its forums. «EVGA will continue to support the existing current generation products. EVGA will continue to provide the current generation products. EVGA is committed to our customers and will continue to offer sales and support on the current lineup.»

While Nvidia and AMD design the GPU that sits on the board, the actual card itself that slots into a computer is built by by third-parties such as EVGA, Asus, MSI, and Gigabyte. This is done to separate this low-margin business from the high-margin business of designing the actual chips.

Speaking with YouTube channel GamersNexus, EVGA CEO Andrew Han said that while graphics cards are 80% of the company’s business, the firm makes 300% more of a margin on power supplies. Han said EVGA “wouldn’t even entertain the idea of working with Intel or AMD» because of the inherent problems with the business model.

Han also told GamersNexus that Nvidia regularly mistreated the company — despite it holding 40% of the North American market share of Nvidia cards — by keeping it in the dark on prices until the last minute. Nvidia would also regularly undercut its partners like EVGA by selling its own first-party branded cards

Data from Jon Peddie Research shows that while Nvidia’s margins have been increasing year-over-year, largely because of the need for GPUs in data centers around the world, the margins for graphics card add-in-board partners like EVGA have slipped from 25% in 2000 to around 5% in 2022.

Although a doubling of hash rate in such a short period of time would be an impressive metric elsewhere, it’s merely a fraction of the nearly 1000 TH/s Ethereum had the hours before the merge.

For companies like EVGA, Asus, and Gigabyte, this will be a tough period as they work through a market that’s oversupplied.

Gamers who haven’t been able to get a graphics card at market price in years, will be happy.

   

Source

Click to rate this post!
[Total: 0 Average: 0]
Показать больше

Добавить комментарий