AMD Swings to a Loss But Revenue Down Less Than Expected
16 Ottobre 2015 - 12:00AM
Dow Jones News
Advanced Micro Devices Inc., battered by a shrinking market for
personal computers, on Thursday reported another quarter of lower
sales, and struck a deal that would give it a $371 million cash
infusion.
Still, shares of the company rose 1.5% to $1.99 in late trading
as revenue declined less than expected. They have fallen 26% this
year.
Overall, AMD swung to a $197 million loss, or 25 cents a share,
from a year-earlier profit of $17 million a share, or 2 cents, as
revenue fell 26% to $1.06 billion. Excluding $48 million in
restructuring charges and other items, the loss was 17 cents a
share.
Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters had projected a 12-cent
loss on $995.9 million in revenue.
Gross margin narrowed to 22.5% from 34.6% a year earlier and
24.6% in the third quarter. A $65 million inventory writedown, AMD
said, accounted for about six percentage points of the drop.
Earlier this month, the Sunnyvale, Calif.-based company moved to
lay off about 500 workers and outsource services as part of a
broader realignment to boost computer and graphics chip sales.
Also on Thursday, AMD said it struck a deal with Nantong Fujitsu
Microelectronics valued at about $436 million that's expected to
close in the first half of 2016. Under the terms of the deal,
Nantong Fujitsu Microelectronics, the controlling partner, would
take a 85% ownership stake in AMD's operations in Penang, Malaysia,
and Suzhou, China. AMD said the deal would be cost neutral but
significantly cut its capital expenses.
AMD said revenue for the latest quarter in its
computing-and-graphics segment declined 46% from the year-ago
period and had a $181 million operating loss. AMD, which ended the
quarter with $755 million in cash and $2.26 billion in debt,
depends heavily on a few customers. In 2014, five of its customers
accounted collectively for about 61% of its net revenue, with
Hewlett-Packard Co., Microsoft Corp. and Sony Corp. each generating
more than 13% of AMD's sales, according to a regulatory filing.
For the current quarter, AMD projects revenue to increase
between 7% and 13% from the third quarter.
AMD results follow Intel Corp.'s r eported 6.3% third-quarter
profit decline on Tuesday, though higher chip prices and demand for
larger computers helped soften Intel's shrinking PC business
decline.
Intel is the largest supplier of chips for personal computers,
followed by AMD. The two companies use the same fundamental design,
known as x86, that powers nearly all PCs.
AMD has been trying to reduce its reliance on PC sales,
developing chips for gaming systems and customized chips to order
for other suppliers. But PC chips remain its biggest business.
Write to Maria Armental at maria.armental@wsj.com and Don Clark
at don.clark@wsj.com
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(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 15, 2015 17:45 ET (21:45 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2015 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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