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    AMD’s Fusion Chip Ramp Grows Profits, Though Sales Drop

    Written by

    Jeff Burt
    Published July 21, 2011
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      Advanced Micro Devices is beginning to see results in the aggressive rollout of its Fusion processors, which helped the company turn a $61 million profit in the second quarter despite an overall softening of the PC market and the company’s continuing search for a CEO.

      During a July 21 conference call with analysts and journalists to announce the vendor’s second-quarter financial results, Thomas Seifert, AMD’s CFO and acting CEO, said the company’s “Brazos” processors, for lightweight notebooks and netbooks, is an “unqualified hit” and is one of the fastest-ramping products the company has released.

      AMD sold 3 million Brazos units in the first quarter, and another 6 million in the second. At the same time, the ramp for the company’s “Llano” Fusion A-Series chips for mainstream notebooks and desktops is going even faster, Seifert said.

      “The success of the APUs demonstrate that we have the right strategy,” he said.

      AMD launched is long-awaited Fusion initiative at the 2011 Consumer Electronics Show in January. The Fusion chips-dubbed APUs, or accelerated processing units, by the company-offer discrete-level graphics integrated onto the same piece of silicon as the CPU, helping to drive performance increases while reducing power consumption and costs.

      The APUs now account for about 70 percent of notebook chip shipments and revenues for notebooks, according to AMD officials. They also represent about 40 percent of all chips sold by the vendor, and help increase average selling prices, which helped boost AMD’s bottom line in the first half of the year.

      The APUs also will represent key tools in AMD’s push into the booming tablet market, currently dominated by highly energy-efficient chips designed by ARM Holdings and manufactured by the likes of Qualcomm, Texas Instruments and Nvidia.

      AMD has been criticized for not pursuing the tablet space more aggressively. However, Seifert argued that the market was still in its early stages, and there was time for AMD to gain traction.

      “It’s still a very fragmented market,” he said. “It’s still a very small market, outside of the [Apple] iPad.”

      He also dismissed claims that tablets are cannibalizing the notebook book space, calling tablets “another computing device, so we believe it is an opportunity.”

      AMD’s initial reluctance to pursue the mobile device space-including tablets and smartphones-is a key reason why the company is looking for a CEO. Former top executive Dirk Meyer had argued that AMD, the world’s second-largest chip maker behind Intel, should focus most of its efforts on its core PC and server businesses. That reportedly ran against what the board of directors wanted, and days after AMD launched the Fusion chips in January, Meyer resigned.

      Analysts have said that the drawn-out CEO search is hurting AMD’s status with investors, and the number of high-profile names who reportedly have turned down the company’s overtures doesn’t help. That group reportedly includes Apple COO Tim Cook; Pat Gelsinger, the longtime Intel executive who now is COO at EMC; and ex-Hewlett-Packard CEO Mark Hurd, now a president at Oracle.

      However, AMD General Counsel Harry Wolin said during the call that members of AMD’s executive search team is happy with the quality of the candidates they’ve met with and that they’re confident a strong CEO will be found. He declined to say when a person would be named.

      Seifert has said he is not a candidate. However, under his direction, AMD has done well. The $61 million profit was a sharp change from the $43 million loss AMD posted during the same period last year. However, the company also saw revenues decrease 5 percent year-over-year-to $1.57 billion-though they were buoyed by higher average selling prices.

      Seifert and other AMD executives said they expect the momentum to continue in the second half of the year. The Fusion APUs will continue to ramp. In addition, the company is readying the launch of a 16-core server chip, “Interlagos,” which will be based on the “Bulldozer” core. Rick Bergman, senior vice president and general manager of AMD’s Products Group, said the chip will roll out in the third quarter.

      Bergman said during the call that he expects Interlagos will help AMD gain in market share in the server space.

      Overall, AMD continues to trail Intel in the chip market. In June, market research firm IHS iSuppli said Intel in the first quarter held 82.6 percent of the worldwide chip market, a 2 percent increase over the same period last year. At the same time, AMD saw its share drop to 10.1 percent, down from 11.8 percent in the first quarter of 2010.

      Jeff Burt
      Jeff Burt
      Jeffrey Burt has been with eWEEK since 2000, covering an array of areas that includes servers, networking, PCs, processors, converged infrastructure, unified communications and the Internet of things.

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