Intel Saw A 23% Client CPU Market Share Increase In Q2 2023 While AMD Fell -5.3%

Hassan Mujtaba
Intel's Global Desktop & Notebook PC CPU Shipments Reached 50 Million Units, More Than 3 Times Higher Than AMD & Apple Combined 1
Image BG: Freepik

The Client CPU market seems to have broken its downward trend with Intel leading the charge over AMD, reports Jon Peddie Research.

Intel Gains While AMD Loses Client CPU Market Share: Segment Sees First Positive Growth After Two Years

Update: JPR has shared a new chart that shows the Intel CPU market share at 83% followed by AMD's market share at 17%.

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Source: JPR

The client CPU market has been on a decline for a long time now. Ever since the pandemic and the global economic situation, both Intel and AMD have seen major losses but that changed within this quarter as the market has shown its first signs of recovery.

Image Credits: JPR

In the latest statistics posted by Jon Peddie Research, the PC Client CPU units reached 53.6 Million units in Q2 2023 which was a 17% increase from the previous quarter while iGPU shipments saw a boost of 14% (49 million units). The notebook market showed total dominance with a 72% share & the desktop CPU shipments saw a 28% hold which was a slight decline from the previous quarter.

Compared to the previous year, the numbers may still look a bit bleak with a -23% decline for all client-based chips. The desktop CPU shipments decreased by -25% while notebook shipments saw a decline of -22%. When it comes to AMD and Intel, the red team saw a market share decline of -5.3 percent while Intel's share grew by 23%. This is mainly due to Intel focusing more on the entry-tier and mainstream chips whereas AMD CPUs were entirely focused on high-end audiences.

Jon Peddie, president of JPR, noted, “Q2’s increase in client CPU shipments from last quarter is positive and welcomed news in what has been depressing results for that quarter as well as for the last two years. Integrated graphics also increased from last quarter, which is not too remarkable given most CPUs have built-in GPUs. The forecast for next quarter is a cautionary positive. AMD and Intel are guiding upward, albeit modestly.

via JPR

However, that will change soon as AMD did introduce more mainstream options within its Ryzen CPU lineup, and the ramp of Phoenix Ryzen 7040 APUs will help boost their shipments. Meanwhile, Intel is preparing the Raptor Lake Refresh CPU family for desktops and Meteor Lake CPUs for the laptop segment which will be a major growth factor for the company in the second half of 2023.

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Hassan Mujtaba Photo

About the author: A Software Engineer by training and a PC enthusiast by passion, Hassan Mujtaba serves as Wccftech's Senior Editor for hardware section. With years of experience in the industry, he specializes in deep-dive technical analysis of next-generation CPU and GPU architectures, motherboards, and cooling solutions. His work involves not only breaking news on upcoming technologies but also extensive hands-on reviews and benchmarking.

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