Ingebor has posted on Reddit the most recent sales and revenue share of AMD’s Ryzen & Intel Core CPUs from Mindfactory, Germany’s largest computer retailer.
While AMD Ryzen CPUs continue to rule the German DIY market, Intel Alder Lake CPUs gain market share globally.
We have reported over the past few weeks on how the general PC market is declining as a result of growing inflation. Both AMD and Intel are anticipated to have a decline in desktop revenue in the upcoming quarter, but it appears that AMD’s Ryzen CPUs continue to outsell Intel’s most recent and finest Alder Lake CPUs in Germany’s DIY market.
Sales/Revenue Statistics for Intel Core and AMD Ryzen CPUs by Mindfactory :
According to sales data provided by Mindfactory, 63 percent of the CPUs sold in June were from AMD, while 37 percent were from Intel. Over 7,500 AMD Ryzen CPUs were sold, compared to over 5,000 Intel CPUs. The most widely purchased AMD CPUs were the Ryzen 5 5600X, Ryzen 7 5800X, and Ryzen 9 5950X. The Ryzen 9 5900X actually outsold the more popular Ryzen 5 5600G and Ryzen 5 5500 in terms of sales. This is mostly because the Zen 3 range of smartphones, which is already over two years old, received cheap rates.
On the other side, the 12th Gen Alder Lake range accounted for nearly all of Intel’s sales. The Core i7-12700K, Core i5-12400F, and Core i5-12600K were Intel’s most widely used CPUs. The income split was also the same, with sales of AMD CPUs accounting for 61 percent of Mindfactory’s total revenue of over 2.5 million euros and sales of Intel CPUs coming in at 39 percent, or little over 1 million euros. The sales and revenue numbers have a clear downward trend that is reminiscent of the previously noted deteriorating PC industry.
Figures for Intel Core and AMD Ryzen CPUs per chip from Mindfactory:
The top three chips, the Ryzen 5 5600X (435,000 Euros), Ryzen 7 5800X (416,000 Euros), and Ryzen 9 5900X, generated the most money (391,000 Euros). CPU costs are falling for both Intel and AMD, and Intel recently launched a retailer-specific price cut that would reduce costs for some 12th Gen Alder Lake CPUs by as much as 5%. Since these numbers are for the previous month and the price cut is scheduled for the current month, it will not be displayed here.
Regarding the family breakdown, the most recent Alder Lake (12th Gen) and Vermeer (Ryzen 5000) CPUs from Intel and AMD account for 75 percent of sales and 83 percent of revenue, respectively.
Because DIY enthusiasts haven’t received a new product family in more than two years, the AMD Ryzen Threadripper and Intel Core-X HEDT range have completely vanished from the chips. AMD has stated that Threadripper 5000WX CPUs will be available in the DIY market, but as these are full-featured PRO parts, consumers will need to spend far more than they did for the HEDT family.
According to the article, unless Intel comes up with something really, really fantastic, it appears like Germany will remain AMD’s bastion. Later this year, when the red team will concentrate its AM4 on the mainstream and AM5 on the high-end section, we will see if Raptor Lake is able to further erode AMD’s market share in the mainstream market.