- Mar 13, 2006
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I have read the 14a document, and it says nothing about distribution either way...
Read it again.
I have read the 14a document, and it says nothing about distribution either way...
Originally posted by: Viditor
Originally posted by: Phynaz
Usually (and this will be explained at the shareholders meeting) a significant number of those shares get passed on to current shareholders
Read the proxy. These shares will not be made available to shareholders.
I have read the 14a document, and it says nothing about distribution either way...
Their current stockholder equity is $5.785 Billion (Dec 31 2006) as opposed to $3.352 Billion the year before (please note that this is total equity, not just assets), so I would suggest that your contention is incorrect.
Considering that equity includes ATI which was bought for $5.4 billion, you just proved my point for me.
Ummm...Accounting 101 here. It also includes the debt and expenditures used to buy ATI, which balances that out. You are counting assets and not liabilities...the equity counts both.
No, he said the major revenue for Barcelona would be accounted for at the end of the summer.
Originally posted by: Phynaz
No, he said the major revenue for Barcelona would be accounted for at the end of the summer.
Oops, try again.
CRN: When will Barcelona ship?
RICHARD: It's slated for introduction at the end of the second quarter and will be in the market in the third quarter.
CRN: You mentioned the importance of Barcelona. What will be its impact on AMD this year?
RUIZ: This is an incredibly important product transition. We don't expect the ramp [this year] to be dramatic because it's a new core, new micro architecture and platform.
No Barcelona until end of summer, and then not many.
Originally posted by: rchiu
If you look a little deeper, you'd see the equity increased because of the $3.2Billion "goodwill" from the ATI purchase. It means ATI worths $x and AMD paid x+$3.2B because they think ATI worth x+3.2B to them. If AMD cannot realize the $3.2B they overpaid for ATI asset, those goodwill don't mean anything and you can count on the shareholder's equity getting reduced.
AMD borrowed bunched of money to buy ATI. It is a risky move for them, especially at a time when their main product is at the end of the life cycle and they don't have a new product to replace it. They borrowed bunch of money, increase their interest payment and decreased their flexibility to borrow more money while their cash flow is squeezed because they can only compete with price cuts with the current product. Their new product is months away and they don't know what the yield is gonna be, how competitive it is gonna be, and if Intel will react with equally competitive product.
I like AMD product, don't get me wrong. But AMD is just in a bad financial position right now. They burned bunch of cash, borrowed bunch of money, and they don't have sure cash flow. Intel on the other hand have better product for now, better manufacturing capability, and deeper pocket to squeeze AMD on price. I do hope AMD can come up with Barcelona quickly, get a good yield, and make it a mass market product, not just a niche server product. They gotta be able to get some cash making product quickly, and not just beating their chest and saying how fast their processor or graphic card is. But after P4 mess, Intel seems to have their act together and I expect them, together with nVidia, to continue coming up with good products and squeeze AMD on cash flow.
Originally posted by: Phynaz
No, he said the major revenue for Barcelona would be accounted for at the end of the summer.
Oops, try again.
CRN: When will Barcelona ship?
RICHARD: It's slated for introduction at the end of the second quarter and will be in the market in the third quarter.
CRN: You mentioned the importance of Barcelona. What will be its impact on AMD this year?
RUIZ: This is an incredibly important product transition. We don't expect the ramp [this year] to be dramatic because it's a new core, new micro architecture and platform.
No Barcelona until end of summer, and then not many.
Originally posted by: BlingBlingArsch
how bout u quote where it mentions distribution.
Originally posted by: BigDH01
I wonder just how many Barcelonas they plan on shipping. Doesn't do much good to have a hot new architecture when you aren't shipping enough to overcome your operating losses. You'd think if they were really confident in the product and their process, they'd ramp immediately considering how anticipated this chip has been.
As an enthusiast, I hope that the limited shipments don't go directly to Dell (or other OEMs), but they most likely will. Here's to AMD beating production expectations (I hope).
Originally posted by: ahock
I've been reading most of your post Viditor and I'm almost certain that you tend to side more or bias to AMD than with Intel although making PD of owning Intel stocks doesn't change with what our views here.
Anyway, I think eventhough Penryn doesn't have any architectural improvement vs C2D which will translate to dramatic performance improvement, I guess having this at 45nm will still make Intel competitive since it can produce more die per wafer. They can lower down cost ithout hurting more on their bottomline. This we still have to wait how far Intel can push its frequency up. Lets not forget Intel have a 1600MHz FSB chipset in their roadmap which will really make it competitive.
Originally posted by: ahock
I've been reading most of your post Viditor and I'm almost certain that you tend to side more or bias to AMD than with Intel although making PD of owning Intel stocks doesn't change with what our views here.
Anyway, I think eventhough Penryn doesn't have any architectural improvement vs C2D which will translate to dramatic performance improvement, I guess having this at 45nm will still make Intel competitive since it can produce more die per wafer. They can lower down cost ithout hurting more on their bottomline. This we still have to wait how far Intel can push its frequency up. Lets not forget Intel have a 1600MHz FSB chipset in their roadmap which will really make it competitive.
Originally posted by: Viditor
I wouldn't count on them being able to produce more dies per wafer...remember that the extra cache takes up a huge amount of the added room, and there are many other additional transistors on Penryn as well. Penryn has ~50% more transistors than a C2D with 4MB cache.
I do agree with you that the faster FSB will be quite effective, but I think we need to wait and see a demo of it first...
Originally posted by: Viditor
As to Intel having their act together, that was quite apparent to me the day that they cancelled Whitefield and bit the bullet...
Unlike many of the people here, I think that Penryn is much more hype than actual substance (Intel marketing sure has done a great job though!), but Nehalem on the other hand could be as significant an improvement as C2D was. The problem is that we don't have even a glimmer of an idea as to how well the project is going!
Originally posted by: coldpower27
Originally posted by: ahock
I've been reading most of your post Viditor and I'm almost certain that you tend to side more or bias to AMD than with Intel although making PD of owning Intel stocks doesn't change with what our views here.
Anyway, I think eventhough Penryn doesn't have any architectural improvement vs C2D which will translate to dramatic performance improvement, I guess having this at 45nm will still make Intel competitive since it can produce more die per wafer. They can lower down cost ithout hurting more on their bottomline. This we still have to wait how far Intel can push its frequency up. Lets not forget Intel have a 1600MHz FSB chipset in their roadmap which will really make it competitive.
The issue is neither the Core 2 Duo or K8 let alone K10 which has even largers on die caches are likely to be memory bandwidth starved, so I don't think going to 1.6GHZ FSB will do that much, but we will see.
45nm Core 2 Duo's will allow Intel to up the clock frequencies while maintain the same thermal envelope for Dual Core and lower it for Quad Core.
Penryn derivatives will have some improvements, like increased cache size and SSE4, so we will have to see how competitive they are to AMD's offerings.
On a final note, your first paragraph is quite wise and I agree with the assessment.
Originally posted by: Viditor
Cut me some slack here Cold...at least I am straight up about it!
BTW, I have yet to see you post a positive note about AMD for as long as I can recall...don't throw stones in glass houses, mate.![]()
Originally posted by: coldpower27
Originally posted by: Viditor
Cut me some slack here Cold...at least I am straight up about it!
BTW, I have yet to see you post a positive note about AMD for as long as I can recall...don't throw stones in glass houses, mate.![]()
There is no glass houses to break, I do say positive things about AMD, when they are deserving of it of course. Don't you worry, I can see positive points about AMD, such as the better gaming performance of the Athlon 64 vs the Pentium 4 line.
Originally posted by: Viditor
Originally posted by: coldpower27
Originally posted by: Viditor
Cut me some slack here Cold...at least I am straight up about it!
BTW, I have yet to see you post a positive note about AMD for as long as I can recall...don't throw stones in glass houses, mate.![]()
There is no glass houses to break, I do say positive things about AMD, when they are deserving of it of course. Don't you worry, I can see positive points about AMD, such as the better gaming performance of the Athlon 64 vs the Pentium 4 line.
That's sort of like me saying I can see some true benefits from the P4...it keeps the house warm. :roll:
My point is that you seem to be just as biased as I am, but towards Intel (and yes, I too say positive things about Intel...when they deserve it).