UPDATE: Advanced Micro Sees Better Demand As 3Q Loss Widens
October 15 2009 - 4:49PM
Dow Jones News
Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (AMD), like rival Intel Corp.
(INTC), reported demand for PC chips picked up in the
third-quarter, even as the company posted its third straight year
of losses in the third quarter.
AMD said strength in both of its businesses, selling the chips
that run computers and graphics cards used for editing video and
running games, helped lead to an 18% jump in sequential revenue.
AMD said it would have been profitable, excluding the impact of its
spun-off manufacturing operations.
The results offered support for Intel's bullish earnings report
Tuesday that suggested PC demand was recovering even faster than
many had hoped.
"It basically confirms all the positive things that we've heard
for the past couple months here," said Wedbush Morgan analyst
Patrick Wang.
AMD is keeping pace with Intel, he said, and with strong
back-to-school sales, "We saw both of these companies benefit."
AMD shares, up nearly 75% since mid-August, fell following the
report, dropping 4.5%, to $5.91 in after-hours trading.
The semiconductor maker also said it expected fourth-quarter
revenue to be "up modestly" from the third quarter. Analysts were
expecting revenue of $1.36 billion, which is lower than the third
quarter's sales.
Chief Executive Dirk Meyer attributed AMD's $2 million core
profit to "strong demand for our product and platform offerings
combined with disciplined execution."
Meanwhile, amid the improving PC market, AMD continues to
struggle with stiffening competition with Intel and its own
financial burdens, especially after its 2006 acquisition of ATI
Technologies. While AMD's manufacturing spinoff bolstered its cash
position, the company still retains a high debt level.
But some analysts say AMD's new chips for portable notebooks and
servers put it in a position to regain market share against Intel
in 2010.
In the latest quarter, AMD reported a loss of $135 million, or
18 cents a share, narrower than the prior-year loss of $127
million, or 22 cents a share, and the average analyst estimate on
Thomson Reuters for a loss of 42 cents a shares. The latest results
included a $66 million gain from the repurchase of debt.
Revenue dropped 22% to $1.4 billion but surpassed the Thomson
Reuters estimate of $1.26 billion.
Gross margin fell to 41.9% from 51% amid the sales woes.
Shipments of microprocessors and graphic processor units were
flat from last year, while the average selling prices of both types
of chips were down from a year earlier.
-By Jerry A. DiColo; Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2155;
jerry.dicolo@dowjones.com
(Kathy Shwiff contributed to this report)