As much as I'd want or hope for this the latest roadmaps from AMD suggest there will be no Socket AM3+ FX chips from AMD at all in 2014. It looks like Kaveri in January on Socket FM2+ is going to be it.
We're going to have to wait until 2015 for anything Excavator and by then Intel will have Haswell Refresh out and be working on either Broadwell and Skylake at .14nm.
That's why I said "the next couple of years", not 2014 specifically. Anyway, the mainstream Intel chips (everything except LGA 2011) max out at 4 cores, so AMD isn't really at a substantial disadvantage on that front even if they stick to APUs - as long as Steamroller manages to get rid of the CMT penalty.
My gut feeling is that there will likely be no Steamroller chip with more than 2M/4C, but that Excavator will probably see a server and/or FX release, though it may come after the corresponding APU. I don't think any future architectures will be on AM3+; it's more likely that AMD would create a new socket. It would presumably be designed for server use first and foremost, with the lower-binned chips going to enthusiasts. Excavator widens the execution units substantially, and that seems unnecessary if AMD is only going to focus on the low end. At this time it seems that AMD is primarily focused on the console contracts (PS4/XB1), and secondarily on low-power chips for portable devices, with servers and enthusiasts being an afterthought. But in the long run, if they want to turn enough profits to sustain R&D, they're going to have to go after the high-margin server market. And APUs just aren't going to cut it there.
As for Broadwell and Skylake, I don't see this changing the equation much. Intel is no longer focused on squeezing out the last possible bit of IPC; they are more concerned now with reducing power consumption and improving the GPU side. I don't expect to see more than 10% additional IPC from Skylake over Haswell, and clock speeds aren't going to go up - they peaked with Sandy Bridge, and all of Intel's process nodes below 32nm have been optimized for power consumption, not high clocks. We will be seeing a greater convergence between Intel and AMD with regards to mainstream processors: Intel will improve their graphics to approach (if not quite catch) AMD, and AMD will increase their IPC to approach (if not quite catch) Intel. And both sides will obsess over reducing power consumption for the mobile market, which is apparently the only thing that matters now. No, I'm not bitter...