Advanced Micro's Founder Departs on a Losing Note
By CHRIS GAITHER
SAN FRANCISCO ESTERDAY, W. J. Sanders III released his 119th, and last, earnings report as chief executive of Advanced Micro Devices, the chip maker he founded 33 years ago. He ended his reign as he, like most entrepreneurs, began: losing money.
The loss was narrower than Wall Street analysts had expected.
The flamboyant salesmanship Mr. Sanders has exhibited since he started the company in 1969 has become a trademark of Advanced Micro, especially in the longstanding feud with its larger rival, Intel.
Over the years, Mr. Sanders has competed with, insulted and occasionally sued Intel, which sells the chips at the heart of 8 of every 10 personal computers. People in the industry say the fierce competition has pushed Intel and wrung better products and lower prices out of the entire semiconductor industry.
But at the age of 65, Mr. Sanders is finally loosening his grip on Advanced Micro. Next week, he will hand control of daily operations to his handpicked successor, Hector de J. Ruiz, the president and chief operating officer.
Mr. Ruiz, who was hired away from Motorola in January 2000 as the heir apparent to Mr. Sanders, will assume the title of chief executive at a gathering for Wall Street analysts in New York on April 25. Mr. Sanders will remain chairman until 2003, when he expects to step down.
Advanced Micro reported a net loss of $9.2 million, or 3 cents a share, for its first quarter, ended March 31. Analysts had forecast a loss of 6 cents a share, according to a survey by Thomson Financial/First Call. During the period last year, the company had a profit of $124.8 million, or 37 cents.
Sales were $902 million, down sharply from a year earlier, when Advanced Micro reported revenue of $1.2 billion. Mr. Sanders said the company had maintained its market share in PC chips; he called that an achievement, given that Dell Computer, which sells only Intel-based systems, was the only computer maker to grow last quarter.
In comments accompanying the earnings report, Advanced Micro, based in Sunnyvale, Calif., indicated that the semiconductor industry had continued to return to normal seasonal patterns after the worst year in its history, though no major recovery was seen. Intel reported similar observations but stronger financial results on Tuesday, when it announced a profit of $936 million.
For the current quarter, Advanced Micro said it expected to sell 5 percent to 10 percent fewer PC chips and to report sales of $830 million to $900 million. Mr. Sanders backed off from earlier promises that the company would turn a profit again during the quarter, though he said that might happen.
"If we make the $900 million end of the range, we make money," he said.
In regular trading, shares in Advanced Micro rose 47 cents, to $14.82. Intel's positive earnings report from the evening before led technology issues upward. Its shares gained $1.13, to $30.64.
Advanced Micro was once a back-up supplier for Intel's contracts with computer makers, but by the late 1980's, Mr. Sanders had turned it into a ferocious competitor.
"He's been able to stay two or three chess moves ahead of anybody else in the market," said Joe David Jones, a former Advanced Micro executive who founded BridgePoint Technical Manufacturing, which tests chips.
With its Athlon chip for desktop PC's, Advanced Micro built a following among computer enthusiasts, who like the Athlon for its speed at playing computer games and rendering graphics. But the company is still struggling to win support in the corporate market. It hopes to change that with a new line of chips, called the Hammer family, expected late this year. Hammer chips use a technology that allows them to run both 32-bit and 64-bit computer programs, a claim Intel has not yet matched.
"The Pentium killer," as Mr. Sanders described Hammer yesterday, is expected to run desktop, notebook and powerful data-serving computers.
Many analysts say Advanced Micro's introduction of the Athlon is a nearly flawless execution of its strategy to identify and exploit Intel's weaknesses. The analysts said Hammer holds even greater promise, but said the company must maintain its focus on execution under Mr. Ruiz as Hammer arrives in the market.
Outwardly, the two men are different in striking ways. Mr. Sanders is the consummate salesman, known for his exquisitely tailored suits, Rolls-Royces and meticulous grooming. After years of practice, anti-Intel comments roll easily off his tongue. Mr. Ruiz is praised as more of a technical and operations expert, the ego to Mr. Sanders's id.
But a spokesman for Advanced Micro, who said the transition had been carefully planned, noted that the men shared a similar vision. He said they would continue for another year to divide responsibilities in much the same way as they have.
Though Mr. Sanders's title may change, executives who know him well said that Mr. Sanders, who is known as Jerry, was unlikely to fade away quickly.
"His involvement will decline slowly over time as both A.M.D. and Jerry get used to him not being the C.E.O.," said Atiq Raza, a former heir apparent who left Advanced Micro in July 1999 over differences with Mr. Sanders. "He won't be completely giving away the reins. They will slowly slip from his hands over time."
Yet there was a clear note of farewell as Mr. Sanders concluded a conference call for analysts today by noting that the previous three decades had been a pleasure.
"Next time I won't be the host, but I'll be listening in," he said. "God bless."
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