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To: Mohan Marette who wrote (134224)6/23/1999 10:01:00 PM
From: PAL  Respond to of 176388
 
In an interview today with CNBC, Abby says that the worst is over for the tech sector. She still sees good days ahead for the stock market. There you go Abby!!

I don't know about Mary Meeker. She is beautiful (homecoming queen etc), but she follows the wind, i.e. issues opinion after the fact.

BTW: Just got a reminder from Dell that the Annual Meeting is July 16, 1999, but no proxy??? heh heh heh *LOL* Maybe I'll vote NO, no?



To: Mohan Marette who wrote (134224)6/23/1999 10:15:00 PM
From: Alohal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 176388
 
Mohan: AMD to post 200MM 2Q loss! Wonder what CPQ, GTW, E-Machines will do if (when??) AMD folds and they have to stand in line behind Dell to get INTC chips? <gggg>

AMD warns of 2Q loss
Chipmaker says aggressive pricing
from Intel will result in $200M loss
June 23, 1999: 6:23 p.m. ET

NEW YORK (CNNfn) - Advanced Micro Devices Inc.
stunned investors Wednesday, warning it expects to
report a $200 million second-quarter operating loss
due to a sharp decline in the average selling prices
for its line of chips for personal computers.
The loss, almost 3-1/2 times what Wall Street
had expected, is the latest in a series of missteps for
the company as it struggles to compete with
arch-rival Intel Corp. (INTC)
"The revenue generated for microprocessors is
extremely disappointing," W.J. Sanders, AMD's
chairman and chief executive officer said in a
conference call with financial analysts. "We lost
some business … where we deemed it imprudent to
match Intel's price."
Sanders said the company expects to report
second-quarter revenue of less than $600 million.

Another quarter, another warning

The earnings warning marks the second
consecutive quarter in which AMD (AMD) has faced
problems due to falling chip prices.
AMD said it expects to take the loss despite
"substantially higher production" of its AMD-K6
family of microprocessors and a wider mix of
higher-speed models.
The Sunnyvale, Calif.-based company said that
while it expects to produce more than 6 million K6
chips, it is unlikely to sell more than 3.7 million units
in the quarter. AMD shipped 4.3 million K6-2 chips in
the first quarter.
While the operating loss will be offset by a pre-tax
gain of more than $400 million on the recently
concluded sale of Vantis, AMD's programmable logic
subsidiary, Sanders called the operating results "a
bitter disappointment."
Analysts polled by First Call had expected AMD
to lose 40 cents per share in the quarter ending June
27. Given the 147 million shares outstanding, the
revised expectations means that the second-quarter
operating loss would be roughly $1.36 per share
when it reports the results on July 14.

Looking forward to K7 chip

Sanders added that the company expects to
garner "several million dollars" in revenue from
advanced shipments of its next-generation Athlon (or
K7) processor, which the company began shipping to
computer makers Wednesday.
"Our ASPs [average selling prices] took a
beating," he said. "They will be in the low $60 range,
significantly down from the $78 average selling price
in the first quarter. We need the higher margins of the
K7 to return to profitability."
Though Sanders declined to comment on what
AMD expects the average selling price for the K7
chip to be, he said the company anticipates a
"dramatically higher price" for the new processor.
AMD priced the 600-MHz K7 chip at $699 in
1,000-unit quantities. The company priced the
550-MHz model at $479 and the 500-MHz K7 at
$324.
"While the K7 is priced substantially below Intel's
Pentium III, it's significantly higher than we've ever
charged before," Sanders said.