| To: Jozef Halada who wrote (22540) From: Lynn Segal Thursday, December 14, 2000  7:28 PM ET
 Reply #  of 23002
 
 MORGAN STANLEY DEAN WITTER
 Neutra
 Mark Edelstone/John Cross/Louis Gerhardy (San Francisco) – Dec. 14, 2000
 52-Wk Shs Out EPS EPS EPS 5-Yr Est.
 Price Rng Div Yld (MM) 99A 2000E P/E 2001E P/E Growth
 $17 $49–13 -- -- 357.0 $(1.05) $2.35 7.0 $2.00 8.3 15%
 Target Price: NA Market Cap: $5.9B
 
 Valuation
 We believe AMD has the capability to complete its product
 transition in 2001 and increase its K7 MPU production
 successfully in the next several quarters. In addition, the
 company should be able to scale up K7’s performance in
 successive product rollouts. However, given that the MPU
 industry is highly competitive, we believe AMD would need
 to meet the significant challenges by continuing to execute
 flawlessly in the upcoming quarters. Consequently, we are
 maintaining a cautious earnings outlook for 2001 and our
 Neutral rating on the stock.
 Key Investment Positives
 · Athlon should help AMD’s average selling prices. We
 believe the Athlon MPU has helped AMD to increase
 blended MPU average selling prices and to increase its
 addressable market. The Athlon has proven to be a high-performance,
 highly scalable processor that should be able
 to compete effectively against the high end of Intel’s
 processor line. AMD initially supports Athlon MPUs with
 its own chipset, and several Taiwanese companies provide
 additional chipset support.
 · Demand for flash memory remains strong. We believe
 AMD is continuing to benefit from strong demand in the
 flash market, which is driven by communication
 applications. Although we believe cellular handset
 shipments would experience decelerating growth in 2000
 and 2001 compared to 1999, we believe the industry is still
 consuming significant amounts of flash memory due to the
 increasing memory content for each phone shipped. For the
 third quarter, cellular handsets accounted for roughly 35%
 of AMD’s flash output while data communication,
 automotive, and industrial applications accounted for
 majority of the rest. We believe the company is still on
 track to grow its flash output in megabits by around 100%
 in 2001. In addition, we believe demand for flash memory
 will remain solid in 2001.
 · Potential for higher margins. Due to the high fixed-cost
 nature of AMD’s business, incremental revenues should
 enjoy high incremental margins. We believe the key to
 realizing this potential is solid manufacturing and
 marketing execution. Thus far, AMD’s execution on
 Athlon has been excellent.
 Key Investment Risks
 · We think expanding the Athlon family and managing
 product transitions is a key issue. We believe the transition to Athlon and Duron — AMD’s MPUs for the performance and value segments, respectively, which utilize Athlon’s core architecture — is a key factor for AMD’s continuing revenue growth and margin performance.
 · Cyclicality of semiconductor industry. While the
 semiconductor industry has enjoyed a historical compound
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