AMD Q1 2015 Earnings - 23 cents a share loss, to exit dense server (SeaMicro)

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Mar 10, 2006
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That's actually a surpisingly good answer.

Being willing to accept low margins on the consoles has worked out for them well.

I don't see how this was "risky" at all; high revenue at relatively low margins still brings in much-needed revenue/profit dollars.
 

mrmt

Diamond Member
Aug 18, 2012
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Paying too much for ATI, buying Seamicro, being the only bidder for the consoles' APUs?

Making a bet too low for other players to compete wasn't a risky move for AMD, but a risk mitigating behavior in order to really clinch the deal. Were AMD in a better financial situation they could have bartered for better margins, but with things as bad as they were at the time they were could not afford to not clinch this deal, and that meant offering margins other players were not willing to follow, thecrappy margins they have today.
 

ShintaiDK

Lifer
Apr 22, 2012
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And save 4-5 billion in the process. Billions that should have been spendt on improving products.

There is no excuse, the ATI buy simply destroyed both companies. And it took AMD 5 years before the first brutally bolted on GPU on a CPU was released. The ATI buy did absolutely nothing.

All AMD got left is consoles. But that wont last forever.
 
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AtenRa

Lifer
Feb 2, 2009
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And save 4-5 billion in the process. Billions that should have been spendt on improving products.

Minus 1B for the fail GPU and close to 10B trying to enter the mobile/tablet market, right.

At least AMD spend 4-5B but they have the better product and a lead of two years or more against Intel in iGPU.
 

Fjodor2001

Diamond Member
Feb 6, 2010
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And save 4-5 billion in the process. Billions that should have been spendt on improving products.

There is no excuse, the ATI buy simply destroyed both companies. And it took AMD 5 years before the first brutally bolted on GPU on a CPU was released. The ATI buy did absolutely nothing.

AMD had no option. Without ATI they they couldn't have gone ahead with the APU plans, at least not with a successful iGPU part.

Bying ATI was the right thing to do. It's been other issues that have given AMD troubles. Just because AMD is in trouble doesn't mean the acquisition of ATI is the root cause of that.
 

ShintaiDK

Lifer
Apr 22, 2012
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AMD had no option. Without ATI they they couldn't have gone ahead with the APU plans, at least not with a successful iGPU part.

Bying ATI was the right thing to do. It's been other issues that have given AMD troubles. Just because AMD is in trouble doesn't mean the acquisition of ATI is the root cause of that.

They could easily have gone the APU route. Buying ATI was simply one of the prime moments of complete arrogance and incompetence at AMD. And again, 5 YEARS before the first APU. They gained nothing and they spilled every single chance of anything.

The history have shown what an epic disaster it was. Something most people already saw when they bought it. To even defend it as some kind of rational buy is completely out of touch with reality. In Q2 by the looks of it, AMD will drop below 1 billion $ revenue.
 
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AtenRa

Lifer
Feb 2, 2009
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Not to mention Intel spend 7.7B to acquire McAfee in 2010 and operating income all those years is negligible.
 

Lonyo

Lifer
Aug 10, 2002
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X-Post from Video Cards forum:

AMD is in quite a lot of trouble because they are running out of cash, and need a way to get more. Accounting profits and losses as in this thread ("Earnings") are entirely irrelevant to whether a company can keep going.
AMD has had accounting losses for most of the last decade and is still here. However, the running out of cash thing is an actual real tangible problem that will actually mean they might go out of business.

They need money, but problem is that people probably won't lend them much more money to add to the debt pile, and they only have about 5 quarters of cash left at the most recent quarter's burn rate.
They do have a $500m revolving line of credit until 2020 which is only $130m drawn currently, so they have $370m available to draw, but that also makes the debt pile bigger so it just gives them some breathing room, but doesn't solve anything much.

They have $1.3b in current liabilities and $2.5b in current assets, with $300m in other assets plus $300m property, plant and equipment, and $2b of debt.
That's a total of $3.3b debt and other payables, and $2.9b "actual" assets.

(The $300m of "other assets" is $200m of software and tech licenses which probably don't have a sale value, plus some other stuff, so I removed the $200m from the actual assets above.)

There is zero stockholder equity, and the only thing AMD have to borrow against as a security is Goodwill. Which isn't something you can really securitise against.

The only other thing that you can borrow against is future earnings. Which is where the problem comes. If your earnings are tanking and you are making losses, you can't borrow much against those earnings.

AMD is at a situation where there is a real possibility of running out of cash in the near future.
Their credit rating is "Highly speculative", which is the second level of non-investment grade ratings.
Further, at year end the repayment balance on the debt was $2,025 (which is how much they would have to pay the lender) but the market value of the debt (effectively how much the lender could sell it for/how much they think they will get back of it) is only $1,858, so the market things AMD won't be able to fully repay its CURRENT debt, let alone any future debt it would need to keep cash flowing. At the end of 2013, the market value of the debt was higher than the repayment amount (because of the future interest payments), indicating there were no concerns over the repayment ability of AMD 15 months ago.

The debt starts to mature in 2019, so anyone looking at giving AMD more money would need to consider the likelihood of AMD repaying its current debt in 5 years time.

AMD is at the point where I would think that in 2 years time it's unlikely to still be able to function, maybe sooner, since there doesn't seem to be much sign of their situation improving. Not saying that as an investor, but as a consumer. The chances of longer term (>3 year) support of anything bought right now doesn't seem to be strong. That would then potentially also lead to even lower sales, accelerating the downfall.
 
Aug 11, 2008
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And have the wost product in the market(iGPU perf, perf/watt, price etc).

What do they have now? A combined company with a value of only about 70% of what they paid for ATI, and historically low market share in both cpus and dgpus. I call it the reverse midas touch.
 

Fjodor2001

Diamond Member
Feb 6, 2010
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They could easily have gone the APU route. Buying ATI was simply one of the prime moments of complete arrogance and incompetence at AMD. And again, 5 YEARS before the first APU. They gained nothing and they spilled every single chance of anything.

The history have shown what an epic disaster it was. Something most people already saw when they bought it. To even defend it as some kind of rational buy is completely out of touch with reality. In Q2 by the looks of it, AMD will drop below 1 billion $ revenue.

Again - what option did they have?

* Skip the APU track and produce pure CPUs without iGPU? -No way, most people buy APUs these days and don't add discrete GFX cards.

* Start their own GPU division from scratch? -Look how well that has turned out for Intel. ;)
 

ShintaiDK

Lifer
Apr 22, 2012
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Again - what option did they have?

* Skip the APU track and produce pure CPUs without iGPU? -No way, most people buy APUs these days and don't add discrete GFX cards.

* Start their own GPU division from scratch? -Look how well that has turned out for Intel. ;)

License the tech for a fraction. Just like most CPU makers with integrated IGP does.