It depends on what you're doing exactly. As David Heffernan mentioned, one of the objectives of Direct3D is to move as much processing as possible to the GPU. With the advent of vertex shaders, pixel shaders, and much more, we're closer to that reality than ever.
Of course given infinite time and resources, you can usually create more efficient algorithms in C++ than C#. This will affect performance at the CPU level. Today, processing that is not graphics related is still mostly done on the CPU. There are things like CUDA, OpenCL, and even future versions of DirectX which will open up possibilities of moving any parallel-friendly algorithm to the GPU as well. But the adoption rate of those technologies (and the video cards that support it) isn't exactly mainstream just yet.
So what types of CPU-intensive algorithms should you consider C++ for?
- Artificial Intelligence
- Particle engines / n-body simulations
- Fast Fourier transform
Those are just the first things I can think of. At least the first two are very common in games today. AI is often done in a compromised fashion in games to run as quickly as possible, simply because it can be so processor intensive. And then particle engines are everywhere.