| By Virtualization News | Article Rating: |
|
| May 3, 2007 05:30 PM EDT | Reads: |
13,851 |
AMD's first quarter was a disaster.It's not just that its ASPs were gutted by the price war with Intel, "80%" of AMD's problems were simply shipments, its CEO Hector Ruiz said.
ASPs were only a "small piece" of the picture, Ruiz said, a fact that has a lot to do with Intel's product overhaul. He said it took Intel four years to do it, but "they did a good job."
AMD lost $611 million, $1.11 a share, in Q1 on revenues of $1.233 billion, coming in a bit above the $1.225 billion number it gave out last week when it slashed its forecast from $1.6 billion-$1.7 billion.
The company said its operating loss amounted to $504 million and its gross margin was a piddling 31%, down from 59% a year ago.
The loss was double what Wall Street anticipated.
And AMD's not expecting things to improve greatly this quarter. It's expecting revenues to be flat or, God willing, slightly up. AMD claimed to see some price stabilization and some recovery in the channel at the end of Q1 but it's "still competitive."
The one bright spot AMD could claim was its design-win pipeline, which it described as being as full as it's ever been, but it's unclear when any of that will produce revenue. Yet it thinks it might see market share increases this quarter. It's not too concern with inventory since the pieces are pretty current. "Well positioned in 65nm," it said.
The Q1 numbers include ATI acquisition-related and integration charges of $113 million, or 21 cents a share.
MPUs accounted for $918 million in revenues, including a full quarter of ATI chipset revenues. Year-over-year server and desktop processor units and revenues declined "significantly." Mobile apparently improved "significantly." Graphics contributed $197 million.
In the fourth quarter when AMD started flailing it lost $529 million on revenues of $1.773 billion.
AMD CFO Robert Rivet called the Q1 showing "disappointing and unacceptable" and a "major setback." Ruiz called it a "perfect storm," a combination of competitive products, market complexity and pricing pressure. (Wonder if he remembers how that movie ended.)
Among other things, AMD seems to be undone by the new complexity of the market it complains of. It says it needs to improve the top line and change its cost structure.
The company is now scrambling to reinvent itself, what Ruiz called "accelerating the second half of its transformation" and everything's on the table. The possibilities are "damn near infinite," Ruiz said.
It's pulling together a task force to oversee and implement whatever they come up with.
It's depending heavily on the success of the Barcelona server quad, which should be in products in Q3 and naturally it claims OEMs are delighted with the part. "Barcelona can't come quick enough," AMD said. It's also trying to accelerate its 65nm transition and knows it has to bring 45nm on board as soon as it can.
It's also counting on ATI's next round of 600 Series graphics.
It's simplifying its account management and is hoping to pick up new OEM accounts and broaden its profile in existing accounts. It is also trying to stimulate channel demand.
It's toying with a scheme it calls "asset-lite" to move some of its R&D and manufacturing costs over to partners like it's done with IBM Microelectronics and the Chartered Semiconductor foundry. It's already pulled in its horns on 300mm wafer capacity hoping to save $500 million, a move that will impact it at least into '09, and although it hasn't started laying people off yet, it intends to reduce its workforce and save $100 million on discretionary spending.
AMD is considering moving production of certain products to emerging markets and stratifying existing products. Barcelona, for instance, will apparently produce a desktop chip. It is also looking into monetizing its IP.
Published May 3, 2007 Reads 13,851
Copyright © 2007 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By Virtualization News
SYS-CON's Virtualization News Desk trawls the news sources of the world for the latest details of virtualization technologies, products, and market trends, and provides breaking news updates from the Virtualization Conference & Expo.
![]() |
Virtualization News 04/23/07 08:36:48 PM EDT | |||
AMD's first quarter was a disaster. It's not just that its ASPs were gutted by the price war with Intel, '80%' of AMD's problems were simply shipments, its CEO Hector Ruiz said. ASPs were only a 'small piece' of the picture, Ruiz said, a fact that has a lot to do with Intel's product overhaul. He said it took Intel four years to do it, but 'they did a good job.' |
||||
- Cloud Expo New York Speaker Profile: Mark Hinkle – Citrix Systems
- Big Data Expo New York Speaker Profile: Eric Baldeschwieler – Hortonworks
- IBM Rips Out Its Siebel Seats
- IBM & Red Hat Will Reportedly Join OpenStack
- Cloud Expo New York: Industry-Leading CxOs to Present June 11-14
- System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2012 as Private Cloud Enabler
- Big Data: The ‘Perfect Storm’ Syndrome
- Virtual Private Cloud Computing vs. Public Cloud Computing
- Eighteen Open Source Content Management Systems (Part 3)
- Big Data: Information Spawns Innovation
- MapR Adds Hadoop Connectors
- OpenNebula: Open Source Cloud Management
- Red Hat Executive Appointed to Technology Services Industry Association (TSIA) Support Services Advisory Board
- Cloud Expo New York Speaker Profile: Mark Hinkle – Citrix Systems
- Big Data Expo New York Speaker Profile: Eric Baldeschwieler – Hortonworks
- IBM Rips Out Its Siebel Seats
- Hadoop Quickstart: Create and Better Manage Hadoop Clusters on Rackspace
- IBM & Red Hat Will Reportedly Join OpenStack
- Cloud Expo New York: Industry-Leading CxOs to Present June 11-14
- Apache Hadoop: Now, Next, and Beyond at Cloud Expo New York
- System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2012 as Private Cloud Enabler
- Big Data: The ‘Perfect Storm’ Syndrome
- Virtual Private Cloud Computing vs. Public Cloud Computing
- Eighteen Open Source Content Management Systems (Part 3)
- After Ubuntu, Windows Looks Increasingly Bad, Increasingly Archaic, Increasingly Unfriendly
- SCO CEO Posts Open Letter to the Open Source Community
- Simula Labs Launches Hosted Delivery Platform To Enable Enterprise Open Source Adoption
- Where Are RIA Technologies Headed in 2008?
- Source Claims SCO Will Sue Google
- How Open Is "Open"? – Industry Luminaries Join the Debate
- Latest SCO News is Plain Weird
- SCO Claims Linux Lifted ELF
- IBM Tells SCO Court It Can't Find AIX-on-Power Code
- Flashback: Investing in 'Professional Open Source' - Exclusive 2004 Interview with David Skok, Matrix Partners
- Developing an Application Using the Eclipse BIRT Report Engine API
- HP Starts Pushing Desktop Linux






















