AMD Reports $611 Million Loss
mpfife writes "Toms Hardware reports that declining microprocessor sales have pushed AMD deeply into the red. 'The company reported a net loss of $611 million on revenues of $1.233 billion, which is more than 20% below the guidance the company expected at the end of Q4 2006. The loss includes charges related to the ATI acquisition in the amount of $113 million, but is mainly a result of the increasing competition with Intel in the microprocessor market.'"
Regardless of your feelings on the Intel/AMD processors, I don't think any one of us wants to envision a world with only Intel making x86 processors. Don't get me wrong, they're doing an excellent job, but just how much of this recent surge was a result of the increased competition from AMD?
I am not an expert. If I am misled in something, please correct me.
I wonder if AMD will loose the competition to Intel all together.
Do we risk going back to having only one big CPU producer?
Not if investers are smart. Duopolies are the next best thing to having a monopoly, meaning it has fat profit margins. However, if it is truely a business that requires economies of scale, then if AMD shrinks down past a certain size, it could risk being left out in the cold. I think this is just a temporary blurp. No need to worry yet. Tech is cyclical, including chips.
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IBM have some very high volumes parts (some mobile chips, the CPU in every new console, etc), but they can't compete with Intel in terms of investment in the semiconductor market. If anything happened to AMD, then IBM would have some serious problems. The only way out would be to dramatically increase the sales of PowerPC chips. They might be able to do this using open source - sell appliance-type systems where the user doesn't need to know what OS or CPU is running - but it's a gamble.
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You just made the most incredibly generalized financial analysis I've ever read. 2/3 their costs? Do you have any idea about fixed vs. variable costs?
I can't believe you got modded up, since its clear that you didn't even bother to take a look at their financials. Impressive though, if you can come to any kind of understanding of a business with two lines of information - profit and revenue. I just hope you're only investing your money.
The AMD/Intel dogfight is about way more than x86 market share...it's about the future of the hardware platform. Intel has always been restrained by competitors who will offer us a user-friendly alternative to whatever Intel and Microsoft are dreaming up. When Intel and Microsoft were pushing the CPUID, AMD refused to go along and Microsoft had to make do with a hardware profile they whip up from the onboard devices and serial numbers. If it was not for AMD, every web site you visit today would be able to read your cpu serial number and log your machine in as a unique visitor. Instead of the RIAA grabbing IP addresses and attempting to identify the user with some cumbersome legal process, they would just log your cpuid and subpoena the corresponding machine. Microsoft is still working to that end with whatever tools they can and they know that they need amd and intel completely and irrevocably in bed with them which they know cannot happen when amd and intel are still bitter competitors. So Microsoft has never done anything to help AMD and hopes that AMD is finally sinking for good.
Do you mean the 32-bit Athlon? Around that time, AMD were developing x86-64 while Intel were developing Itanium/Itanic. AMD were first to market with a 64-bit CPU normal people actually wanted; Intel's 64-bit offering was a hideous beast and they sold exactly twenty-nine of them. The P4s of the time were hot and slow, the Athlon-64s and Opterons were much nicer. But Intel came back strongly, improving the P4, adopting x86-64 and getting ahead in the multi-core race. AMD just couldn't keep up.
Even when the Athlon was on top in terms of performance, they didn't sell nearly as many as Intel sold P3s and P4s.
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And I see Core 2 Duos with 1MB L2 cache, compared with Turions with 512K per core... You're just taking the worst-case example, and complaining about it as if it's typical.
Not to mention that Turion X2s have 128K L1 cache, while Core 2 Duos have a paltry 64K of L1. L1 is much more significant than L2.
What's more, L2 cache isn't magic, anyhow. According to benchmarks, the difference between 2MB L2 cache, and 4MB L2 cache, makes AT VERY BEST less than 10% of a performance improvement. http://www.bit-tech.net/hardware/2006/07/14/intel
Actually, it isn't. Core 2 CPUs are Intel's desktop CPUs as well. AMD, OTOH, has a different line of CPUs for their desktops, with, among other things, typically 1MB of cache (in your words) "per fucking core."
No, I don't remember that at all. the Pentium D is the euphemism for a Pentium 4, that they've used just in the past few months now.
People are supposed to accept your theory, because you've shown how you know absolutely nothing about processors? I'll pass. AMD can figure out how to make fast CPUs without your "help." They've just been caught napping, and need time to catch up.
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A lot of this is directly AMD's fault. Remember the big AMD/UMC deal back in 2002? AMD was so excited because now they wouldn't have to build more expensive Fabs, so as a result, they didn't. Then the deal fell through, and AMD was left scrambling to make up for their years of anemic manufacturing investment as a result of this deal. You cannot blame that kind of mismanagement on the competition.
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