AMD sees big jump in revenue, profits
By Michael Kanellos news.com.com
Story last modified Tue Oct 11 13:55:00 PDT 2005
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Advanced Micro Devices saw sales jump 23 percent and net income rise by 72 percent in the third quarter, thanks to increasing demand for PCs combined with greater acceptance for its products.
The Sunnyvale, Calif.-based processor maker reported sales of $1.5 billion and net income of $76 million, or 18 cents in earnings per share, for the period ended Sept. 25.
That compares to sales of $1.24 billion in the third quarter of 2004 and net income of $44 million, or 12 cents in earnings per share. Last quarter, AMD reported sales of $1.26 billion, but net income of $11 million.
The surge came largely through sales of notebook and server chips. Turion, the company's latest notebook offering, began to ship in volume during the quarter just ended. More large customers also began to adopt servers based on the Opteron processor. Now, 85 percent of the Global 2000 (or their subsidiaries) use AMD products. The figure, often cited by AMD, has climbed steadily in the past two years. New customers include Saudi Aramco, Liberty Media and United Parcel Service. IBM Research at 60 Xbox 360 in a league of its own Intel hustles for dual-core Xeon debut Robot race in the desert A robot world Microsoft gets real on virtualization Real, Microsoft reach truce Previous Next
Sales for the Computation Product Group, which makes processors, rose 44 percent from $673 million a year ago to $969 million, a record.
AMD's battered Memory Products Group also reported some good news. Although the group's revenue declined from a year earlier, it was up 12 percent from $462 in the previous quarter to $516 million. The operating loss also decreased for the group from $90 million in the second quarter to $50 million.
The change in part was due to large cellular manufacturers placing orders for flash memory. AMD is currently trying to spin off its flash memory joint venture, which goes by the brand name Spansion, in an initial public offering.
[Harry: It looks like flash demand is down. I would be really worried if demand was not up q-q as the christmas manufacturing season is underway. It looks like cellphone manufacturers are being careful this year or ASP's are dramatically down.] |