▲ | next_xibalba 4 days ago | |||||||||||||
Prior to the A.I. boom, Nvidia had a much, much more diverse customer base in terms of revenue mix. According to their 2015 annual report[1], their revenues were spread across the following revenue segments: gaming, automotive, enterprise, HPC and cloud, and PC and mobile OEMs. Gaming was the largest segment and contributed less than 50% of revenues. At this time, with a diverse customer base, their gross margins were 55.5%. (This is a fantastic gross margin in any industry outside software). In 2025 (fiscal year), Nvidia only reported two revenue segments: compute and networking ($116B revenue) and graphics ($14.3B revenue). Within the compute and networking segment, three customers represented 34% of all revenue. Nvidia's gross margins for fiscal 2025 were 75% [2]. In other words, this hypothesis doesn't fit at all. In this case, having more concentration in extremely deep pocketed customers competing over a constrained supply of product has caused margins to sky rocket. Moreover, GP's claim of monopsony doesn't make any sense. Nvidia is not at any risk of having a single buyer, and with the recent news that sales to China will be allowed, the customer base is going to become more diverse, creating even more demand for their products. [1] https://s201.q4cdn.com/141608511/files/doc_financials/annual... [2] https://s201.q4cdn.com/141608511/files/doc_financials/2025/a... | ||||||||||||||
▲ | tomrod 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
I'm not sure your analysis is apples to apples. Prior to the AI boom, the quality of GPUs slightly favored NVidia but AMD was a viable alternative. Also, there are scale differences between 2025 and before the AI boom -- simply put, there was more competition in the market for a smaller bucket and favorable winds on supplier production costs. Further, they just have better software tooling through CUDA. Since 2022 and the rise of multi-billion parameter models, NVidia's CUDA has had a lock on the business side, but face rising costs due to terrible trade policy by the US, significant rebound from COVID as well as geopolitical realignments, inflation on the workforce, and rushed/buggy power supplies as their default supply options have made their position quite untenable -- mostly CUDA is their saving grace. If AMD got their druthers about them and focused they'd potentially unseat NVidia. But until ROCm is at least _easy_ nothing will happen there. | ||||||||||||||
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▲ | KaoruAoiShiho 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
Nobody said this was the case... The only example I used was the console market which has been ruined because of this issue. They generally left that market because it was that horrible. | ||||||||||||||
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