The latest market statistics from Jon Peddie Research for Q1 2026 show a decline in both GPU and CPU shipments. Rising component and memory prices significantly impacted the PC segment during this period, with discrete graphics card shipments falling to 11.8 million units and desktop CPU shipments to 15.7 million units.
According to the report, add-in board (AIB) GPU shipments declined by 0.6% compared to the previous quarter. Nvidia managed to retain its lead despite a decline in shipments, while AMD sits in second place with an 8% share. Intel captured 1% of the market, securing a small uptick in shipments during the quarter. The overall attach rate for discrete GPUs in desktop PCs rose significantly to 76%, up 33.3% from the prior quarter. Jon Peddie Research estimates a compound annual growth rate of -3.3% from 2024 to 2029, with the installed base eventually reaching 183 million units.
None of the major GPU makers have launched new architectures yet this year. However, AMD did just introduce the RX 9070 GRE to the global market after a period of China exclusivity. Intel also released new ‘Pro' series graphics cards.
Desktop CPU shipments experienced a sharper downturn, down 24% quarter-on-quarter and 25% year-on-year. The report notes that price hikes and component shortages only began to hit in Q1 2026, suggesting the PC segment could face tougher quarters ahead.
KitGuru says: Rising costs of memory and components are clearly squeezing the desktop PC market. With next-gen architectures potentially pushed back to 2027 or 2028 due to supply constraints, the upcoming quarters could prove challenging for hardware vendors.
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