AMD Logo

AMD reports its highest revenue in 14 years, projects strong Q4 on Ryzen sales

Ryzen 7, Ryzen 9, Epyc server processor drive sales
Trade
Image: AMD

31 October 2019

If there was a message underlying AMD chief executive Lisa Su’s comments after the company’s third-quarter earnings call, it’s this: AMD is not a low-end supplier any more.

About a week or so after Intel reported an unexpectedly prolonged processor shortage
in its own earnings report, Su was asked whether AMD would step in, especially at the low end of the PC market. Though she said she saw “pockets” of weaker demand in the low end, her response was telling: “It’s not a significant driver of the business.”

AMD reported third quarter profits of $120 million, up nearly
fourfold from the $35 million in profits the company reported a year ago. Revenue climbed to $1.80 billion, which AMD noted represented the highest mark since the fourth quarter of 2005, hearkening back to the days of the Athlon 64 X2. 

 

advertisement



 

The company’s outlook was the unexpected highlight. Normally a
footnote to an earnings call – with the exception of Wall Street
investors – AMD predicted that fourth-quarter sales would climb a whopping 48% compared to a  year ago, to $2.1 billion, driven by Ryzen, its Epyc server processor, and Radeon sales.

Right now, AMD’s story is a simple one. AMD’s Computing and Graphics segment is firing on all cylinders, with revenue up 36% year-on-year to $1.28 billion. Desktop sales outpaced mobile, but both grew nicely, Su said. GPUs declined slightly, though that was due to a slowdown in datacenter GPUs that Su believed would reverse course in the fourth quarter.

AMD’s Enterprise, Embedded, and Semi-Custom business lagged, down 27% to $525 million. While AMD noted that Epyc processor sales were up, the lull in anticipation of the next-generation Xbox and PlayStation consoles has consumers waiting. That dragged down the business unit as a whole. A year from now, when the consoles launch, AMD expects semi-custom chips to be a strong business once again, Su said.

The key, though, is that customers are demanding high-end products. On the client side, the highest customer demand is for Ryzen 7 and Ryzen 9 chips, Su said. In the Epyc server business, AMD is also seeing a richer mix of higher-margin products, specifically those with 48 and 64 cores. The ramp into 7nm manufacturing continues apace, with AMD’s major product lines transitioning “very quickly,” Su said.

Next up? AMD’s third-generation Threadripper and the Ryzen 3950X – a bit late, but indicative of the demand for higher-end products that is driving AMD’s revenue projection. Su didn’t mention any anticipated problems manufacturing either chip in sufficient quantity, though that’s one of the reasons the 3950X was delayed.

For now, however, the scarlet letter – S, for “shortage” – hangs on Intel’s chest, not AMD’s.

IDG News Service

Read More:


Back to Top ↑

TechCentral.ie