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Weak PC sales hit AMD

By Reuters
US, 07 Jul 2015

Chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) lowered its revenue estimate for the second quarter, below analysts' average estimate, saying the demand for personal computers was weaker-than-expected.

AMD's shares fell as much as 15% to $2.10 in extended trading yesterday, after the company also cut its adjusted gross margin forecast for the quarter ended 27 June.

"They are going through a big transition. It's not a one quarter turnaround story, it's going to take multiple quarters for the vision to come to fruition," says Wedbush Securities analyst Betsy Van Hees.

The company has been shifting focus to gaming consoles and low-power servers but progress has lagged Wall Street's expectations due to intense competition from Intel and new competitors designing low-cost and power-efficient chips.

Reuters reported in June that AMD was at the initial stage of reviewing whether to split itself in two or spin off a business, in a move to reverse its fortunes and take on Intel.

The company said yesterday it expects revenue to have decreased about 8% from the first quarter, compared with its previous forecast of down 3%, plus or minus 3%.

This implies revenue of about $948 million. Analysts were expecting $999.6 million, according to Thomson Reuters.

The Sunnyvale, California-based company also cut its forecast for second-quarter adjusted gross margin to about 28%, as weak demand from PC makers also hurt demand of its accelerated processing unit (APU) chips which combine both computing and graphic processing capability.

AMD had forecast margins of about 32%.

Van Hees said a weak PC market coupled with competition from Intel weighed on demand for the company's APU chips.

AMD, which has an extensive cross-licensing agreement with Intel, has competed with the bigger chipmaker since the 1980s.

The company warned in April that it expected weak demand for personal computers to continue for some time as original equipment manufacturers focus on lean inventories.

The company said yesterday it expects gross margin to be hit by a one-time charge of about $33 million associated with a transition from 20nm chip-making technology to FinFET.

AMD will report second-quarter results after market close on 16 July.

The stock had fallen about 14% through yesterday's close since the company reported results in April.

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