News NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50 Series GPUs Already Facing Shortages, Prices For RTX 5090 & RTX 5080 Have Doubled In Some Regions

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NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50 Series GPUs Already Facing Shortages, Prices For RTX 5090 & RTX 5080 Have Doubled In Some Regions​

Miscommunications Between NVIDIA & its Board Partners are Reportedly Causing Shortages in GeForce RTX 50 GPUs


NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090 & 5080 are reportedly short in supply, causing delays in shipments and even price increases in some regions.
Since the reveal of NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50 series GPUs, there have been a couple of reports suggesting that it could be difficult to secure an RTX 50 GPU at the time of launch.

A few days ago, we reported that due to the extremely limited availability of higher-end RTX 50 GPUs, particularly the RTX 5090, it will be hard to buy one at MSRP. Now more reports have confirmed that this is indeed true, making the GPUs extremely scarce in the market worldwide.

Benchlife reports that there have been some miscommunications between NVIDIA and its board partners, due to which the market will see a limited stock of RTX 50 series GPUs. This includes the RTX 5090 and RTX 5080, but the RTX 5070 GPUs might also be affected. As per the sources, the availability is going to improve only at the Spring Festival, but till then, there is no guarantee that customers can get one of these GPUs at MSRP.

A similar report has emerged from another source, UDN, which claims that due to an acute shortage of RTX 5090 and 5080 inventory, a significant surge in prices has been seen in some regions (specifically China) and that now the GPUs can retail at twice their MSRPs. This means the RTX 5090 could retail at up to $4000 while the RTX 5080 is at $2000. The AIBs are supposedly going to benefit a lot from this price increase, including ASUS, Gigabyte, and MSI.

This seems one of the worst-case scenarios for a launch and is probably going to exist for a couple of weeks or even months before one can see these GPUs at their official MSRPs. The RTX 5090 is already at a high $1999 price tag with AIB custom editions going at even higher prices. Both the RTX 5090 and RTX 5080 are launching on 30th January and some of the custom editions have already been listed on retailers.

The EU GPU prices are particularly going to be higher due to the premium tax and, considering how bad the availability of these GPUs is, don't expect them to go back to normal in a few days.
As far as the NA market is concerned, UDN reports that one of the US dealers has reported that only 20 RTX 5080 units have arrived for the first month and there were no RTX 5090 at all. This scarce supply could last up until the end of Q1 or even Q2, which is quite different from the time when NVIDIA launched the RTX 40 series GPUs.

Source: https://wccftech.com/nvidia-geforce...es-ahead-of-launch-rtx-5090-5080-price-surge/
 
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Glad to see NVIDIA hasn't changed its business practices. Hype up a product then artificially keep its stock low so that people buy at high prices (More profit) or resort to 40 series GPUs hence they can get rid of excess stock.
 
Reviews show rasterization performance is not that great and power consumption vs 40 series is bad as well. Will continue to use my 4070ti till 60 series offers some actual gains.
 
This imo will stabilize much faster than previous two generations. These cards are (a) not even released yet and (b) don't offer any real fps per dollar advantage.
 
this has mainly happened due to this, this is why evga left. Also Nvidia itself is to blame as well as they gave the AIBs the chance to capitalize on the pricing of especially the 5080 due to the large gap in pricing which I thing they left intentionally to fill with the Ti/Super variants later down the line. I have got a heavy suspicion that this generation of cards is going to last much longer than any other generation, maybe even over 3 years, this is mainly due to neither TSMC nor Samsung being able to get good yields in their 3nm and 2nm nodes. TSMC is fairing a much better though but it is still not enough to meet demands especially due to the increasing demand in automotive sector and the AI boom. Samsung is in such a bad spot that it might have to outsource the production of its 3nm based Exynos 2500 to TSMC.
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I have got a heavy suspicion that this generation of cards is going to last much longer than any other generation, maybe even over 3 years, this is mainly due to neither TSMC nor Samsung being able to get good yields in their 3nm and 2nm nodes. TSMC is fairing a much better though but it is still not enough to meet demands especially due to the increasing demand in automotive sector and the AI boom. Samsung is in such a bad spot that it might have to outsource the production of its 3nm based Exynos 2500 to TSMC.
 
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