To: Mani1 who wrote (58593 ) 5/18/1999 2:53:00 AM From: Yougang Xiao Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1571935
AMD Investors: AMD MAY be profitable starting in Q3 and thereafter according to the latest SEC filing. In Mark Hachman's latest update reporting, he said at the end of the story: <<Under the amended conditions, AMD may not report a loss of greater than $45 million for the current second fiscal quarter and, more importantly, must turn a profit in the third quarter and for each fiscal quarter thereafter on a consolidated basis. Additional conditions were placed upon AMD's debt ratio, available cash, and net worth. Guys, draw your own conclusion!! Thanks, Dave Langston. Update: AMD cuts prices, reports improved yields By Mark Hachman Electronic Buyers' News (05/17/99, 09:22:33 PM EDT) Advanced Micro Devices followed Intel Corp.'s lead in lowering the prices of its microprocessors, while confirming analyst reports that its manufacturing yields have vastly improved. AMD confirmed that, like Intel, it had reduced prices across its entire microprocessor lineup. Prices of the K6-III fell as much as 45%, as the Sunnyvale, Calif.-based chip maker cut the 450-MHz and 400-MHz K6-III to $220 and $185, respectively. AMD also reduced prices on its mainstream K6-2 processor line, although the cuts ranged from a more moderate 12% to 29%. High-end 475-MHz, 450-MHz, and 400-MHz K6-2's were reduced to $$152, $112, and $82, respectively. AMD will sell the mid-range 380-MHz and 366-MHz K6-2's for $71 and $61, while OEMs designing low-end PCs may purchase the 350-MHz and 333-MHz K6-2 for $56 and $51, respectively. As previously reported, an AMD spokeswoman confirmed that a 500-MHz K6-2 is sampling to OEMs. AMD's prices reflect lots of 1,000 units. Analyst reports and AMD representatives also indicated that Intel's May price cut may not reproduce the events of AMD's disastrous February. At that time, Intel's impending price reductions on Feb. 8 prompted AMD to warn investors on Feb. 4 that the reductions would force AMD's own prices down and cause an operating loss for the first quarter. But according to analyst Dan Niles of BancBoston Robertson Stephens, San Francisco, AMD's yields since March have "vastly improved," Niles wrote in a report released today. An AMD spokeswoman confirmed this, saying that "'vastly improved' seems like a good description." Niles went on to say that industry sources have reported that AMD's K7 is performing at 600-MHz inside the company's test facilities. Although AMD chairman and chief executive W.J. "Jerry" Sanders III has stated the K7 will run at 500-MHz, 550-MHz, and 600-MHz, the company spokeswoman would not confirm the existence of the 600-MHz speed grade. But Niles also warned of a looming price war. The accelerated pace of Intel's shift to 0.18-micron technology, combined with AMD's improved yields plus the likelihood that National will dump its remaining inventory on the open market is a "mixed blessing," Niles wrote. "The good news -- one less competitor in the market for AMD. The bad news -- dumping by Cyrix in the current quarter to clear processors that all of a sudden have a very uncertain future." Even as AMD seems to have begun solving its manufacturing problems, however, the company's creditors have begun taking a harder tack. Under the sixth amendment to its $150 million credit agreement, disclosed last week in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the conditions under which AMD can receive credit became much more restrictive. On the other hand, AMD has not needed to draw upon the credit line to date. Under the amended conditions, AMD may not report a loss of greater than $45 million for the current second fiscal quarter and, more importantly, must turn a profit in the third quarter and for each fiscal quarter thereafter on a consolidated basis. Additional conditions were placed upon AMD's debt ratio, available cash, and net worth.ebnonline.com