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AMD expects 20% decline in gaming revenue from 'higher memory and component costs' in the second half of the year — CEO Lisa Su warns of further memory crunch

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Why This Matters

AMD forecasts a more than 20% decline in gaming revenue in the second half of 2026 due to rising memory and component costs, highlighting ongoing supply chain challenges and increased prices in the gaming industry. This trend underscores the broader impact of component shortages on hardware manufacturers and consumers, potentially affecting gaming hardware availability and pricing. The situation signals a cautious outlook for the gaming segment, emphasizing the importance of supply chain resilience and cost management in the tech industry.

Key Takeaways

AMD announced its financial results for the first quarter of 2026 on Tuesday, noting record revenue in the data center while warning of a further memory crunch on the consumer side. AMD says it's bracing for impact in the second half of the year, noting the headwinds of component pricing and "planning the business accordingly," says AMD CEO Lisa Su.

Breaking down segment financials, Su said that AMD expects demand to drop off in the second half of the year in both its client and gaming businesses due to "higher memory and component costs." That's the sentiment we've heard echoed from executives at Micron and SK Hynix, among at least half a dozen others. AMD says it's bracing for quite the significant impact to its consumer business in the second half of the year, however.

"We expect second half demand in gaming to be impacted by higher component and memory cost," said AMD's Jean Hu, executive vice president and Chief Financial Officer at AMD. "We now expect second half gaming revenue to decline by more than 20% compared to the first half."

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There are a couple of caveats to that quote. First, AMD broadly splits up its business into enterprise, client and gaming, and embedded segments. Here, Hu is talking specifically about gaming revenue — GPUs and consoles — and AMD later noted that consumer demand is partly offset by commercial demand for Ryzen laptops across the entire client segment.

Still, gaming demand is important, especially given the state of console prices. Last year, Microsoft increased the price of its Xbox Series consoles twice. In March, Sony announced price hikes across all new PS5 models. And just days ago, Sony increased the price of refurbished PlayStation 5 Slim consoles by $100. The drop in gaming revenue could be a response to these price increases, or they could be a sign that further price hikes are on the way; there's no way to tell without knowing how many consoles Microsoft and Sony are shipping.

Although consumers will feel even more of the memory squeeze in the second half of the year, AMD won't. The company says it expects data center CPU revenue to increase 70% year-over-year in the second quarter on the back of increased AI demand. That's certainly possible, as just last month, Intel hit a record-high stock price due to increased CPU demand.

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