Advanced Micro Devices on Thursday revealed that it had signed a new wafer supply agreement (WSA) with GlobalFoundries for 2015. Based on the disclosed terms of the agreement, AMD will significantly reduce purchases from GlobalFoundries, which indicates that the company projects further declines of PC-related product shipments this year.
Under the terms of the new agreement, AMD expects wafer purchases from GlobalFoundries to be approximately $1 billion this year on a take-or-pay basis, which is a decline from 2014. Last year AMD planned to spend $1.2 billion on purchases from GlobalFoundries, but its actual purchases from the company in 2014 were approximately $1 billion due to lower fourth quarter purchases.
GlobalFoundries is AMD’s largest manufacturing partner. The company produces accelerated processing units, central processing units, graphics processing units as well as semi-custom APUs for video game consoles for the Sunnyvale, California-based chip designer.
Since demand for PS4 and XB1 system-on-chips is expected to increase this year, this means that the share of such semi-custom APUs in AMD’s purchases from GlobalFoundries will rise as well. However, it also means that the share of APUs, CPUs and GPUs for personal computers will decline in AMD’s purchases from its main partner. Even in the best-case scenario, if everything goes well for AMD this year, the company does not expect sales of its microprocessors and accelerated processing units for PCs to exceed sales of such chips in 2014.
In Q1 2015, AMD spent $161 million on wafer purchases from GlobalFoundries, which is another indicator that the company’s business is declining rapidly. By contrast, in Q1 2014, AMD spent approximately $250 million on wafer purchases from its key manufacturing partner.
Both International Data Corp. and Gartner forecast that shipments of PCs will drop in 2015. Therefore, it is not surprising that AMD projects its APU, CPU and GPU sales to decline. However, it is noteworthy that AMD does not plan to reclaim market share it has lost to Intel Corp. over the years.
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KitGuru Says: AMD does not seem to be very ambitious or optimistic, which is understandable. This year the company will barely have any all-new products to offer to customers (code-named “Carrizo” APU and “Fiji” GPU seem to be good for their market segments, though). Therefore, all the company wants is to stabilize its positions, sustain revenue and earn some profits. Next year AMD plans to introduce brand new microprocessors based on “Zen” and “K12” micro-architectures as well as all-new graphics processors. Perhaps, this is when AMD will actually initiate its fight back?
Now I’m mostly waiting another news within a year period with the keyword ‘acquisition’ .
Well don’t hold your breath, Some ppl have been waiting many years for that.
AMD FX 6-8 Core chips will last well until ZEN with the upcoming DX12 imminent this summer.
Taking the load off the CPU and bringing improved multithreading will easily add another year for those chips.
Odd, No expected rebound releasing R9 300 series, Carrizo & Kaveri refresh!
Nah, it’s not some baseless assumption. The Samsung rumour is also one of the reason. As they always say there is no smoke without fire
Fair enough.
The rumors were started to boost the share price so that the big boys can dump their shares (or short sale shares) to uninformed new AMD shareholders.
It is a tried and proven tactic. Too bad the newbies fall for it over and over again.
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It could also be that GF is selling them cheaper now then in 2014. Surly overtime the cost of building
the node gets paid off leaving extra room to reduce price.
Still hanging on to that Samsung rumor on the buyout that never materialized? If that were true then it would be all over the Korean news, not just a single lone website. That source actually came from one single article: http://economy.hankooki.com/lpage/industry/201503/e20150317173417120250.htm and due to lost in translation effect became the Samsung buyout AMD rumor. The contents actually says that industry insiders highly considers that (or “insist”) Samsung should buy AMD so that they could go shoulder-to-shoulder with giants like Intel and Qualcomm (and the authors based that on Samsung’s previous statement on AMD back in year 2007)…
Just like that BLX rumor also: http://www.itworld.com/article/2875693/amd-the-subject-of-takeover-rumors-by-chinese-firm.html which never materialized…
If the manufacturing process becomes more efficient, could that be a factor in reducing the WSA?