| |   |  AMD’s AI Growth Sends Shares on Biggest Rally Since February 
  finance.yahoo.com
   (Bloomberg) -- Advanced Micro Devices Inc. shares gained as much as 11%  after the chipmaker gave an upbeat revenue forecast, underscoring that  its new artificial intelligence processors are boosting growth. 
   Revenue will be roughly $6.7 billion in the third quarter, the  company said in said Tuesday. Analysts estimated $6.62 billion on  average. Second-quarter results also topped projections, and the company  raised its forecast for so-called AI accelerators — chips used to  develop artificial intelligence models.
  AMD shares rose as high as  $153.60 on Wednesday, marking the biggest intraday gain since February.  They were up 6.9% to $147.96 as of 10:27 a.m. in New York, more than  erasing the 6.1% decline that the stock had suffered this year through  Tuesday’s close.
  The outlook suggests that AMD is making headway  in its pursuit of Nvidia Corp., which dominates the accelerator market.  Nvidia has capitalized on booming demand to send its shares and stock  price soaring over the past year, becoming the world’s most valuable  chipmaker in the process. Now AMD is looking to make inroads with its  own lineup, called MI300.
  Chief Executive Officer Lisa Su said  Tuesday that AMD expects to generate more than $4.5 billion in sales  from its MI300 products this year. That’s up from an earlier target of  $4 billion, though analysts’ estimates have ranged closer to $5 billion.  The growth reflects an effort to ramp up production, but supplies  continue to be tight, she said.
  Su downplayed concerns that the  race to add AI infrastructure is slowing down, saying that customers are  still eager to chase the opportunity.
  “The overall view on AI  investment is: We have to invest — the potential of AI is so large,” she  said on a conference call with analysts. “The investment cycle will  continue to be strong.”
  MI300 revenue topped $1 billion in the  second quarter, and the company committed to rolling out new AI  processors once a year — a key milestone.
  “We continued  accelerating our AI traction,” Su said. Cloud computing and enterprise  customers are embracing AMD’s Instinct MI300X products, she said. And  demand is picking up for its traditional personal-computing and server  businesses.
  AMD’s second-quarter revenue rose 8.9% to $5.84  billion, beating an estimate of $5.72 billion. Earnings increased to 69  cents a share, compared with a projection of 68 cents.
  AMD is  Nvidia’s nearest rival in the accelerator market, but still trailing by a  wide margin. The hope is to gain more of the money that data-center  operators such as Microsoft Corp. and Meta Platforms Inc. are pouring  into the creation of AI tools.
  Though demand for accelerators has  been strong, the appetite for some other AMD products has slowed.  Embedded chips and semiconductors for gaming consoles have struggled  recently.
  AMD’s quarterly report kicks off a week of earnings  updates from large semiconductor makers. Qualcomm Inc., Arm Holdings Plc  and Intel Corp. all report numbers this week, and it comes at a  delicate time for the chip industry. Investors have been selling shares  of the companies after a dramatic run-up earlier this year.
  The  Philadelphia Stock Exchange Semiconductor Index, a closely watched  benchmark, is down 11% this month. For investors, excitement over AI  spending has given way to concern that the infrastructure may not have a  rapid payoff.
  Like Intel, AMD still gets most of its revenue from  personal computer and server microprocessors. Santa Clara,  California-based AMD also competes with Nvidia in the market for  graphics processors that improve the images in video games.
  The  company is the biggest rival of Intel in both server and PC processors —  as well as in programmable logic chips, which can be reconfigured with  software after they’re installed. And it supplies Microsoft and Sony  Group Corp. with the main component in their game consoles.
  AMD’s  data-center unit had sales of $2.8 billion last quarter, more than  double the level from a year earlier. Analysts had estimated $2.75  billion. PC chips brought in $1.5 billion, up 49%.
  Gaming,  meanwhile, was down 59% at $648 million. The two main game consoles that  use AMD chips are now in their fifth year, AMD said. Revenue from  embedded semiconductors was down 41% from last year at $861 million,  hurt by weak demand from customers who have built up stockpiles of  parts. |  
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