AMD's shares have fallen more than 60 percent this year, giving it a market value of about $1.4 billion. It also has long-term debt and capital lease obligations of about $2 billion..........
..........................
Others say AMD's most valuable asset may be its deep bench of engineers or its patents.Goldman Sachs analyst James Covello estimated in a recent note to clients the chances of AMD's PC processor business being sold are between 15 percent and 30 percent.
I think what he meant to say is that the company is undervalued on an Adjusted Net Book value calculation (i.e., you adjust all the assets and liabilities to their respective market values). Also, the net tangible assets exclude any intangible assets such as goodwill, patents and trademarks. That's the point he is making that if you were to take the company and do an orderly liquidation, it is worth more than the $2 market value.
Also, the company was trading at $1.82 on November 21, 2008 and has rebounded to $7-9 range on many occasions. His point is it's not time to panic yet wrt to orderly liquidation/piece-by-piece sale of the firm. The stock's RSI has also fluctuated from 9-30 since June 2012, signalling significant downward selling pressure, which is evident by a very large short-interest on this stock. The $2 price is not necessarily reflective of a proper valuation of the firm. Right now the short-sellings have control, the market trends are negative for the PC market and the global economy is not doing well at all. It's understandable that companies in the tech industry with a poor balance sheet position and poor growth prospects would be especially vulnerable.
Mate, AMD's current market valuation is $1.5bn - their cash reserve alone is equal to that, not to mention the value of their IP and other assets. What debt they do have is nearly all long-term, making it fairly inconsequential.
Really? They drop below their optimal cash target and respond by lowering the bar? That's as bad as the US Govt raising the debt ceiling every time they run out of money.
.AMD's cash declined $279 million in the third quarter to $1.48 billion. AMD said it was reducing its "optimal" cash target to $1.1 billion from $1.5 billion due to the business' now smaller size
Not a chance. Intel has never been amicable with anything to my knowledge. The only way Intel would do so was if they were forced via government intervention.Even if someone buys AMD, will Intel be willing to renegotiate the x86 license?
Got a source for this? My memory is fuzzy when it comes to the revised AMD/Intel settlement agreement.As it is, Intel retains all rights to the x86-64 patents in the event of AMD going bankrupt, with it being unclear whether anyone else can pick up the x86-64 licence from an AMD Firesale.
Got a source for this? My memory is fuzzy when it comes to the revised AMD/Intel settlement agreement.
This is from the FTC agreement with Intel regarding the AMD/Intel settlement. I've highlighted the pertinent information. http://www.ftc.gov/os/adjpro/d9341/100804inteldo.pdfGot a source for this? My memory is fuzzy when it comes to the revised AMD/Intel settlement agreement.
B. In the event the Designated Intel Competitor undergoes a change of control (as
defined in the relevant Designated Intel Competitor Patent Agreement) that is
publicly announced or a Designated Intel Competitor otherwise notifies
Respondent that it has undergone a change of control within five (5) days of such
change of control:
1. for a period of thirty (30) days from the date of the change of control,
Respondent shall not initiate patent litigation against the party acquiring
the Designated Intel Competitor (Acquiring Entity) with respect to
products previously manufactured by or acquired from the Designated
Intel Competitor, unless the Designated Intel Competitor and/or the
Acquiring Entity or another entity controlled by one of them has first filed
any suit against Respondent;
2. within ten (10) days from the date of the change of control, Respondent
shall offer to enter into a written, reciprocal Standstill Agreement with the
Acquiring Entity, such Standstill Agreement to comprise the following
terms:
a. Respondent and the Acquiring Entity shall enter into good faith
negotiations regarding the future patent relationship, if any,
between them;
b. to facilitate those good faith negotiations, for a period of one year
from the change of control, neither Respondent nor the Acquiring
Entity (or any Affiliate of either of them) shall initiate patent
litigation against the other or any Affiliate thereof;
Well you did say this quite emphatically:When their new agreement was brokered, there was of course a lot of discussion about this and copies of parts of the agreement were floating around, but when I looked for it the other day, I couldn't find much.
As it is, Intel retains all rights to the x86-64 patents in the event of AMD going bankrupt, with it being unclear whether anyone else can pick up the x86-64 licence from an AMD Firesale.
ATi is wortless
You can read some of the new agreement here and here (PDF file)
Skimming over that info, what I get out of it is either AMD or Intel can cancel the cross patent agreement providing they give 60 days notice. If either company changes ownership beyond a certain criteria, the agreement is null. I don't know what happens if AMD goes under for good, but whatever happens to AMD they will be bought up by someone, and at that point the cross licensing agreement will have to be renegotiated. Either way it does not appear to be correct to say that Intel automatically has all rights to anything AMD64 related.
...then again I could be wrong because I don't speak legal babble.
They got beat by NVIDIA's smaller midrange chip. That may be even wose than Bulldozer.I don't think GCN (or any of the GPU silicon) is to blame for any ground given up to Nvidia. It seems like along the road, if there was a right path to take or a wrong path to take, regarding everything other than the GPU world (that is the CPU side and business decisions), AMD took the wrong direction. Selling their mobile division. Having a lesson on high IPC vs. going for high clock speed/low IPC right in front of their noses, even being on the winning side of things in the P4/A64 days, yet Bulldozer is what they launch. And of course the price they paid for ATI may ultimately be what hurts AMD more than anything.
They got beat by NVIDIA's smaller midrange chip. That may be even wose than Bulldozer.
They got beat by NVIDIA's smaller midrange chip. That may be even wose than Bulldozer.
Consider me corrected then.
They still have too much debt on books though. I stand by my claim that their shares are overpriced still.
They got beat by NVIDIA's smaller midrange chip. That may be even wose than Bulldozer.
There are more than a few people that would like to see AMD go out of business even though they would never admit it.I think I speak for everyone when I saw "Aww crap".![]()
Consider me corrected then.
They still have too much debt on books though. I stand by my claim that their shares are overpriced still.
Valuation for a continued operation isn't the same of valuation for liquidation /asset sale. Do you think that the stock is overpriced for the former case, the later case or both?
At this point it would be both