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Rising chip sales narrow AMD loss

Daniel Fleshbourne   on 17 October 2003 - 11:12 · 7 comments & 604 views

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Advanced Micro Devices on Thursday reported a third-quarter loss much smaller than expected, thanks to dramatic chip sales increases. AMD reported losses of $31 million, or 9 cents per share, on revenue of $954 million for the quarter, which ended on Sept. 28. During the same period a year ago, AMD lost $254 million, or 74 cents per share, with revenue of $508 million.

Analysts expected the chipmaker to post a 36 cents per share loss and revenue of $858 million, according to First Call. A First Call representative, however, said the analysts' consensus estimate excluded some flash memory revenue that relates to AMD's acquisition of Fujitsu AMD Semiconductor Limited, or FASL, a flash memory joint venture between AMD and Fujitsu. The representative said AMD likely beat estimates, but it is unclear by how much. AMD's dramatically improved results mirror an overall feeling that the PC market is improving. Intel reported better than expected earnings, thanks to higher chip sales, while research firms Gartner and IDC said PC shipments in the third quarter increased 14 percent and 16 percent, respectively, rates that were higher than expected.

AMD said its performance came from higher sales of its PC processors and flash memory chips. The average selling price of both processors and flash memory rose as well, a fairly unusual occurrence.

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News source: news.com


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Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 7 additional comments
#1 matric on 17 Oct 2003 - 12:57
Any loss is a bad loss.
(1 reply) #2 oDD on 17 Oct 2003 - 13:09
Can someone please enlighten me. How can a company keep functioning year after year on a loss?
#2.1 nonick on 17 Oct 2003 - 19:11
funding???

I never heard AMD ever had profit btw... but they must stay, intel sucks. GO AMD! they are close to profit!
#3 Prelude76 on 17 Oct 2003 - 13:38
economics 101. they're making money, but by writing off this and that and everyone in between, you have a 'loss' in the books, therefore avoiding tax man.

#4 123_kid on 17 Oct 2003 - 18:57
Or they stockpiled money when the going was good and are using it now.
#5 ishtar on 17 Oct 2003 - 20:17
Yea when the 64bit takes hold AMD will do better. I'm waiting for the chips and m/b to drop a little in price.
#6 Coolme on 17 Oct 2003 - 20:32
This means that AMD is spending a lot in R&D. Which is good

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