- It is rumored that Nvidia is reducing the production of RTX 5000 Gpu
- Supposedly, manufacturing levels are looking at a 20% or more cut in July
- If it is true, as the effects of that filter, we can expect price increases in September
Nvidia could be planning to reduce the production of its RTX 5000 graphics cards, according to a new rumor, which, of course, would mean less stock on the shelves.
The Japanese technology blog Gazlog noticed a Chiphell post (through WCCFTech) claiming that this is the case, and that Nvidia has already reduced the supply of its Blackwell graphics cards from June.
We are told that in May 2025, RTX 5000 supplies stabilized and GPU stocks increased, with prices falling, in some cases, below MSRP. Therefore, the Green team has apparently decided to reduce the levels of shares from July, and the supply is expected to fall between 20% and 30% compared to June, and as noted, there has already been a kind of reduction for June.
Of course, less inventory would mean the possible spectrum of the GPU price increases, but we must be very careful with the speculation transmitted here, particularly because it derives from Chiphell, which is not always the most reliable source (although it has provided hardware rumors that have proven to be true in the past).
ANALYSIS: Take a GPU quickly?
It would be particularly cautious about this rumor, since the theoretical fall in production is considerable. However, if it is true, it would mean that NVIDIA RTX 5000 GPU prices will surely increase.
Why would Nvidia be planning such movement? Well, part of the statement made here is that prices have fallen too much, because GPU stocks are reinforced beyond the demand that exists. Another theory is that NVIDIA may want to assign chips elsewhere, that is, to graphics cards for China, and mainly the new version of GeForce RTX 5090 D (the Asian variant of the Blackwell badge). The latter sounds a scenario plausible enough.
Of course, if production is adjusting as this rumor suggests, the effects of that will not feel immediately, but in a couple of months. (As there are already chips for being distributed, of course, in the long chain of events that occur when assembling graphics cards).
This is equivalent to the perspective that the price increases around the time of September, and curiously, that idea intervenes with other talks of the GPU vine that we have been listening lately. That is, the speculation of Moore’s law is dead on YouTube that due to several factors, related to both tariffs and hardware updates due to the end of the support for Windows 10, the increases in graphics card prices are produced in the fourth quarter of 2025 (starting in October, in other words).
All of which, given this new rumor, adds to a very strong track that could now be the best time to buy a GPU, especially if you are looking at one of Nvidia’s RTX 5000 models. And with the first day about to happen, and the first offers are already available, in fact, you may want to closely monitor the possible GPU bargains in it. Any discount graphics cards could represent the cheapest prices you can see this year, since Black Friday will arrive too late to avoid what is in process in terms of price increases, at least in theory.