Tech Advisor

AMD’s chip supply will remain tight through 2021

The company neverthele­ss raked in the cash last quarter.

- MARK HACHMAN reports

AMD’s chief executive has revealed she expects the supply of AMD’s chips to be “tight” throughout the remainder of the year, but are expected to ease up in 2022.

Dr. Lisa Su, speaking during AMD’s second-quarter earnings call, also said that AMD is working with its own supply chain partners – makers of semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing equipment – to allow for AMD “to grow substantia­lly” as the company moves into the second half of 2021.

Su’s comments were timely, given that rival Intel has warned of ongoing chip shortages as it begins navigating through

to a transition to new EUV equipment. Su did not say that AMD expected the same, though she did predict the PC market would cool off.

Specifical­ly, Su called out how demand for PCs exploded during 2020 and in the first half of 2021, a trend AMD specifical­ly highlighte­d last year. During that time, Su said, AMD captured revenue market share, or the percentage of all components sold into PCs. But the market is also expected to slow down, Su said: “From our perspectiv­e, you know, we’re planning... our PC business to be about flattish first half and second half,” she said.

She added that those comments accommodat­ed issues that could crop up, such as “pockets of component shortages” – though again, Su did not clarify whether or not she was referring to a shortage of AMD components or some other part that would limit the supply of PCs. “We’re taking that into account as we think about the second half of the year,” Su explained.

“We remain on-track to launch nextgenera­tion products in 2022, including our Zen 4 processors built with industryle­ading 5nm process technology and our RDNA 3 GPUs,” Su added.

AMD reported net income in Q2 that grew a massive 352 per cent yearover-year to $710 million, with revenues that essentiall­y doubled to $3.85 billion. AMD’s Computing and Graphics segment revenue climbed 65 per cent to $2.25 billion, driven by a richer mix of Ryzen desktop and notebook processor sales. AMD also said that it sold more high-end GPUs, driving up the average selling price. AMD’s Enterprise, Embedded and Semi-Custom business also soared, with revenue jumping 183 per cent to $1.60 billion. Here, AMD said that higher Epyc server processor sales contribute­d the most, along with semicustom chips like the APUs that went into consoles like the Microsoft Xbox Series S/X and Sony PlayStatio­n 5.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia