TAKING ON INTEL How companies like AMD, National Semiconductor, and IDT are trying to snatch a slice of the microprocessor market from Intel.
By Michael Slater The Red Herring magazine November 1998
It's hard to imagine that less than 20 years ago Intel was an innovative but small maker of semiconductors. IBM's selection of Intel's 8088 microprocessor for its new personal computer in 1981 forever changed Intel--not to mention the entire landscape of the semiconductor and computer industries. Adeptly seizing the opportunity created by the explosion of the PC market, Intel became the chip industry's powerhouse; it earned $6 billion on $24 billion in revenues last year. Only three companies in the world--Exxon, General Electric, and Royal Dutch--enjoyed greater profits in 1997.
The 100-million-unit market for PC processors has lured half a dozen Intel competitors, led by Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), onto the field, but profits have been elusive for these companies. With nearly 85 percent market share in units and a much higher share of the total revenues, Intel doesn't allow its rivals much room in which to maneuver. It owns the majority of the world's high-performance microprocessor fabs, or manufacturing plants. It is the driving force behind the evolution of the PC's architecture, the dominant supplier of system-logic chip sets, and an emerging force in graphics processors. With nearly $8 billion in cash, it can afford anything from glitzy marketing campaigns to intensive technology development. Keeping up with Intel on Intel's terms is a battle that no company can win.
But a market this big has niches that no one player, not even Intel, can fill. The alternatives to Intel's processors are attractive for one reason: they cost less. Intel's competitors--the publicly held AMD, National Semiconductor's Cyrix division, and Integrated Device Technology (NYSE: AMD, NSM; Nasdaq: IDTI) or privately held startups like Rise Technology, Transmeta, and Metaflow (now owned by STMicroelectronics)--typically make lower-end chips that they price at 25 percent to 50 percent below Intel's comparable products; they can't compete at all with Intel's most expensive processors. Of course, at the low end the profit margins are also less.
The rapid rate of price declines and performance increases in PC microprocessors makes staying in business even harder for Intel's competitors. Price declines of 25 percent per quarter are routine, and Intel cut the price of some of its chips more than 40 percent between June and September. To keep their processors' average selling prices from plunging, companies must keep introducing higher-speed versions--and customers thus expect substantially more for their money every few months.
Aside from price, the key factor in creating opportunities for Intel's competitors is the desire of some of the largest PC makers, including Compaq, IBM, Hewlett-Packard, Acer, and Packard Bell, to break free of the chip giant's grip. These companies would like to procure microprocessors the way they procure other PC components: through a competitive process in which they are free to choose the most cost-effective parts. Moreover, they don't want their brand subordinated to Intel's brand.
The surge of interest in sub-$1,000 PCs during the past 18 months has been a godsend for Intel's competitors. Because buyers who focus on paying the lowest price for a PC are less brand-sensitive than buyers of higher-end systems, PC makers are more willing to put a non-Intel processor into an entry-level machine. Lower price points have been most important in the retail channel, allowing non-Intel processors to become a big part of this segment. In the United States five of the top six retail PC vendors offer systems with AMD or Cyrix processors; no longer are non-Intel chips associated primarily with off-brand systems. According to ZD Market Intelligence, AMD or Cyrix processors were used in 60 percent of the sub-$1,000 desktop machines and in 38 percent of all x86 desktop PCs sold through the U.S. retail channel in June.
On the business side, however, buyers are traditionally more conservative, less focused on price, and more conscious of brand. PC makers thus have been wary of using alternative processors in their lines of business PCs. But with the dramatic success of these chips in consumer machines, penetration of the business-PC market is likely to follow. And follow it must, if Intel's competitors are to grow as much as they hope to.
AMD: FROM INTEL FAMILIAR TO CHIEF RIVAL Many companies carry the imprint of their leader's personality, but few do so more than Sunnyvale-based AMD, Intel's chief rival. Led by Jerry Sanders, a flamboyant salesman with a passion for beating Intel, AMD was founded in 1969, a year after Intel was started. Like Intel, AMD is a traditional semiconductor company with its own fabs. From the start, though, AMD's focus was on building veritable clones of chips already offered by other companies but with some feature benefit, like lower power usage or higher speed.
After years of literally duplicating Intel's designs through patent cross-licenses and other agreements, AMD set off on its own to produce a Pentium-class processor. Its first independent creation was the K5, which lagged in speed and was late to market. In a bold attempt at a quick recovery in late 1996, AMD acquired NexGen, a struggling startup whose 586 processor had modest sales and which was coming dangerously close to running out of cash. NexGen's executives then took over the leadership of AMD's PC microprocessor efforts.
The NexGen 686, already in prototype form at the time of the acquisition, became the AMD K6. AMD was widely criticized for having paid too much for NexGen, but considering the immense short-term importance of the K6 chip and the NexGen team to AMD, the company may have made an excellent deal. But although the K6 has rescued AMD's PC processor business from oblivion, it has not generated profits so far. The company shipped 2.7 million K6 chips in the second quarter of this year, representing more than 10 percent of the overall x86 PC processor market in units but at an average price of only $86, compared with more than $200 for Intel's equivalent. AMD's ultimate goal is to grab 30 percent of the market.
The key to AMD's near-term future is the K6's successors: the K6-2, which began shipping in June, and the K6-3, scheduled to ship by the end of the year. The K6-2's most significant feature is a new set of instructions, called 3DNow, that speeds 3D graphics and is AMD's biggest feature advantage over Intel to date. AMD hopes that the K6-2 will drive a marked increase in its average selling price in the second half of the year. In 1999, however, as faster versions of Intel's new Celeron processor, with larger on-chip caches, set the pace for entry-level PCs, the K6-2--even with its enhanced graphics capability--will be relegated to use in bargain-basement systems.
Most of the Intel-alternative chips, including AMD's K6 family, use souped-up versions of Socket 7, the same interface (which connects the processor to the rest of the system) that Intel used for its Pentium. Intel, meanwhile, has all but abandoned the Socket 7 design; for the Pentium II, it switched to an interface called Slot 1. So far no competitor offers a processor compatible with this interface. The Slot 1 design has some performance advantages, the most important of which is that it has a separate bus for cache memory, which gives the processor much faster access to the cache than is possible in today's Socket 7 chips.
AMD's K6-3 will add more cache memory to the processor chip, offering the same benefit as the dedicated cache bus in Intel's Slot 1 design. If AMD delivers the K6-3 as promised, the question then will be whether the company can secure enough customers to increase its shipments significantly. This will be a challenge because Intel is seeking to shift the entire market away from the Socket 7 interface and will offer increasingly compelling Celeron processors for entry-level systems.
AMD's strategy beyond the K6 has been seriously complicated by a concession the company made in its negotiations with Intel: in return for a renewal of its patent cross-license, AMD agreed that Socket 7 was the last Intel processor interface that AMD would duplicate. This has forced AMD to find an alternative to the Slot 1 interface for its Pentium II-class chips. The company's solution is something it calls Slot A, which borrows its electrical design from Digital Equipment's latest Alpha chip. The Slot A processor module will require a motherboard and chip set that is different from that of any Intel processor.
For the development of its upcoming K7 processor, then, AMD faces both a significant challenge and substantial opportunity in parting from Intel's design. AMD must establish an entire chip set and motherboard infrastructure--and this time, unlike with all its previous processors, AMD's chip will not be compatible with PC system designs created for Intel's processors. If AMD can deliver all the pieces, however, the Slot A strategy could succeed; PC buyers have no reason to care about Slot 1 or Slot A as long as their systems work well. With the K7, AMD may finally be able to compete across the breadth of Intel's product line--if it can convince PC makers to use the Slot A design and if it can overcome the brand preferences of high-end PC buyers.
NATIONAL SEMICONDUCTOR: REDIRECTING CYRIX Until its acquisition by National Semiconductor last fall, Cyrix was the scrappy kid on the block. A venture-funded startup based in Richardson, Texas, Cyrix broke into the business by starting with so-called math, or floating-point, coprocessors. The company had both hits and misses, but it has never been consistently profitable.
Unlike Intel and AMD, Cyrix was until recently dependent on other companies to manufacture its chips. It has had a number of foundry partners, but most of its chips have been built by IBM's microelectronics division--and the relationship has been stormy. National is now starting to build Cyrix chips in its own fab.
Cyrix's MII chip plugs into the Socket 7 interface and performs comparably to a Pentium II on typical business applications. It is slower at graphics processing, however, than the Pentium II and K6-2. This shortcoming has forced Cyrix to price the MII very aggressively; it is by far the cheapest chip in the 300-MHz class.
Inexpensive as the MII has become, Cyrix has a different solution for the lowest-end systems: the MediaGX, the only PC processor today that combines CPU and peripheral functions. By offering a CPU, memory interface, PCI interface, and graphics controller all on one chip, the MediaGX reduces overall system cost. The chip's CPU and graphics speeds are slow, but Cyrix plans to address the deficiencies in its MXi chip, which is due out by early 1999.
National has steered Cyrix to concentrate on its highly integrated chips for the low-cost PC and consumer-device markets and to avoid direct competition with Intel. To this end, National is developing a PC-on-a-chip, promised for mid-1999, that goes beyond the MediaGX to add more peripheral functions. The chip will be too slow for even low-end PCs but could be useful in information appliances like Web access terminals, for which performance expectations are lower. National plans to make a faster but low-end PC-on-a-chip based on Cyrix's MXi in 2000. As National molds Cyrix to deliver low-cost, highly integrated chips for information appliances, the future of Cyrix's processors for mainstream PCs is in doubt.
IDT: FROM SRAMS TO LOW-COST PROCESSORS The newest competitor to begin shipping x86 processors is Integrated Device Technology (IDT), an established $600 million developer of SRAMs, specialty memories, and embedded processors that it builds in its own fabs. Seeking a higher-margin product line, IDT funded a startup design house, Centaur Technology, in 1995. Centaur, which operates as a wholly owned subsidiary in Austin, Texas, brought its first processor to market in two years and introduced a second design less than a year later.
IDT seemed to enter the x86 business with more humility than other competitors. From the start it focused on developing low-cost chips. Its designs are the industry's most compact, minimizing manufacturing cost. But the recent average selling price for the company's PC processors has been below $45--lower even than IDT had intended. Furthermore, it has shipped only a few hundred thousand units per quarter, perhaps 1 percent of the market. But by steadily improving its products, IDT hopes to become a leading manufacturer of low-cost PC processors.
Indeed, IDT is already well along in its goal, with three new designs in development for its WinChip processor line. They are intended chiefly to serve the Socket 7 market that Intel has abandoned and that Cyrix and AMD will deëmphasize in 1999. By the middle of next year, IDT may well offer the industry's fastest Socket 7 processors while competing with Cyrix to power the least-expensive PCs.
IBM: LOOKING FOR PARTNERS IBM's microelectronics division, although relatively low profile, is nevertheless an important player in the PC processor business. That IBM has made money on PC processors where others have failed is due in large part to its unique business model--it has paid nothing for the chip designs. This exceptional arrangement came as part of its agreement to serve as Cyrix's foundry. IBM would commit chip-building capacity to Cyrix at favorable prices; in return, IBM could sell, without paying royalties, as many Cyrix-designed chips under its own name as it shipped to Cyrix.
But with National Semiconductor, Cyrix no longer needs IBM to build its processors. Cyrix's and IBM's strategic interests also have diverged: IBM wants to focus on higher-performance processors; Cyrix, on low cost.
Unfortunately for IBM, it decided several years ago to redirect its internal x86 design team to focus on the PowerPC--the once-promising alternative to x86 processors (see "A Requiem?" May 1997, page 78). For x86 design, IBM chose to rely on partners like Cyrix and NexGen. Now that Cyrix is part of National, NexGen is part of AMD, and the PowerPC is limited to the small Macintosh market, IBM needs a new source for x86 designs. To meet this need, the company is rumored to be involved with other x86 design houses, including Rise Technology and Transmeta. IBM also will begin making chips for IDT late this year, supplementing that company's in-house fab capacity.
THE UPSTARTS: RISE, TRANSMETA, AND METAFLOW The lucrative PC processor market continues to draw new contestants. Rise Technology of Santa Clara is closest of these to shipping a product; its mP6 chip is due out this fall. The 80-person company has disclosed few details other than that it will initially target makers of low-cost notebook computers. (At our press time Rise was planning to unveil the design of its mP6 in October at Microprocessor Forum, where Intel, AMD, Cyrix, and IDT also will make new disclosures.)
Headed by chairman and CEO David Lin, previously a manager in NEC's processor operation, Rise has raised funding from venture capitalists, investment bankers, and PC manufacturers that the company declines to name. Nor will it disclose the foundry partner that will build its chips, but IBM is a good bet.
Another secretive--yet strangely well known--Santa Clara startup is Transmeta, headed by former Sun research manager and processor architect Dave Ditzel. Transmeta hasn't been able to conceal its existence entirely but has refused to divulge anything about its plans. The company has more than 100 employees, including high-profile technologists like Colin Hunter, an expert in translating x86 programs to other architectures; Linus Torvalds, creator of the Linux operating system; and Robert Collins, best known for his Intel Secrets Web site (www.x86.org). Sources who insist on anonymity indicate that Transmeta's chip has its own native instruction set and uses software translation to provide complete x86 compatibility. The company is not expected to start production on the chips until 1999. Transmeta appears to be more performance-focused than the other Intel alternatives, but it is not yet clear which market segment it will target. The company admits to being venture funded, and it also took an investment from Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen; its foundry partners are rumored to be IBM and Toshiba.
Also a potential Intel competitor is Metaflow Technologies of La Jolla, California, a pioneer in advanced microprocessor designs. The company was acquired last year by STMicroelectronics, an early partner of Cyrix that has not produced PC processors for the past few years. ST presumably intends to return to the business with Metaflow's x86 chip design.
THE ODDS Of all Intel's competitors, AMD is clearly placing the biggest bet. With one large fab in Texas dedicated to PC processors and a new fab in Germany due to open in 1999, AMD has invested billions in manufacturing capacity. And to succeed with the upcoming Slot A interface and K7 chip, AMD must develop more infrastructure than ever before.
For AMD to achieve its desired 30 percent market share would require most other Intel competitors to fail. Four or five companies will fight AMD for the role of Intel alternative in certain parts of the market. Cyrix, IDT, and Rise are focused on entry-level PCs, where price is more important than brand; AMD hopes to rise above this battle and serve the midrange to high-end market.
Cyrix's strategy is as risky as AMD's, but in different ways. By focusing on very low cost PCs and information appliances, Cyrix hopes to avoid direct confrontation with Intel. On the other hand, this focus leaves Cyrix dependent on a market that is just emerging--and where the profit per chip is small and high volume thus essential.
IDT's plan is the most straightforward: provide low-cost processors that are compatible with Intel's prior generation. IDT's modest investment in its x86 business and its compact design will be advantages in the competition with AMD--albeit producing a smaller return.
Ultimately, Intel is a manufacturing company, and it has made huge investments in its plants. The company is strongly motivated to keep these fabs full; if necessary, Intel is likely to compromise its profit margins to keep its market share from slipping too far. This is a terrifying prospect to Intel's competitors, whose primary edge is lower prices. If the PC market grows more quickly than Intel's manufacturing capacity, the company will focus its efforts on developing more expensive processors, and many suppliers could prosper. But if the market gets weaker, or if all the growth is at the low end, Intel will have to compete more aggressively on price--and the results could be very ugly for everyone else.
Michael Slater is the founder of MicroDesign Resources, executive editor of Microprocessor Report, and program director for Microprocessor Forum.
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