The quote that you reproduce above says data "from previous year"
i.e., 2012 - 1 = 2011.
In case you did not notice I have given data from 2011, from 2012 and from 2013. Read the remaining 99% of my previous post.
In this case, the remaining 99% of my post still stands: You can't link market data with financial statements:
1) First you cannot use 2011 data to prove *anything* because 2013 will offer over 40% less revenues than 2011, and this is baseline scenario. Once your historical data diverges 40% from your baseline scenario, it is worth nothing.
2) Second your hyping about Intel going down and AMD raising is essentially dissociated from reality. AMD stopped bleeding only after dropping 40% YoY on CPU sales, but we didn't see Q3 yet. It is in Q3 where the impact of Intel launches is felt in AMD results, and in the last two years we got a mayhen.
Disappointing as it may be for the enthusiast community, Haswell brings a lot of improvements for the mobile market, more than Ivy, and if Ivy could wreak havoc in AMD results, it is safe to expect Haswell to get similar results, as Richland (a.k.a. Trinity Panic Edition) doesn't bring anything close to bridge the gap between AMD and Intel. If anything, it will make things a little less worse but nowhere AMD needs.
3) The positive cash flows that AMD is expecting (it was break even two quarters ago) isn't due to CPU revenues, but due to embedded revenues quicking in. CPU position in the market is still weak.
What's implicit in AMD speech is that the new revenue streams will barely be enough to cover the weak position in the CPU consumer market.
4) Last, but not least, AMD in fact beat analyst expectations but just because AMD own guidance was already very pessimistic, and guidance for the next quarter isn't anything to praise at. While you are saying they are rising, in fact what we'll get by AMD own guidance is more cash burn, and flat gross margins, even with a supposedly improved product mix. That's not "rising" in my book.
You should know 1, 3 and 4 if you actually listened to AMD management, as this is more or less their official position on the subjects, and you would know 2) if you bothered to read AMD own SEC fillings.
But instead you don't, and you prefer to live in a PPT land that not even AMD management dares to go.