AMD Conference Call CFO Prepared Remarks

Following Dr. Su, AMD's CFO, Devinder Kumar, also had prepared remarks:

2019 was an outstanding year for AMD. Our competitive product portfolio and market share gains drove the highest annual and highest quarterly revenue in AMD history. We achieved our highest annual gross margin percentage and annual free cash flow since 2011. We improved non-GAAP earnings per share by 39% year-on-year. In short, we are very pleased with our financial performance.

Fourth quarter revenue was $2.13 billion up 50% from a year ago, and up 18% from the prior quarter driven by strong sales of Ryzen and EPYC processors, and Radeon on GPUs, partially offset by softer semi-custom sales. Gross Margin was 45%, up 360 basis points from a year ago, driven primarily by sales of our leadership 7nm  products. Operating Expenses were $545 million, with increased investments in go-to-market activities and R&D, compared to $474 million a year ago. Operating Income was $405 million, up $296 million from a year ago, driven by revenue growth and higher gross margin. Operating margin was 19% as compared to 8% a year ago. That income was $383 million, up $296 million from a year ago. Diluted earnings per share were 32 cents per share, compared to eight cents per share a year ago.

Business Segment Results

The Computing and Graphics segment revenue was $1.66 billion, up 69% year over year, driven by Ryzen processor and Radeon gaming GPU sales growth. The Computing and Graphics segment operating income was $360 million or 22% of revenue, compared to $115 million a year ago, driven by higher revenue.

Enterprise Embedded and Semi-Custom (EESC) segment revenue was $465 million, up 7% from $433 million the prior year. The continued growth of EPYC processes was partially offset by softer semi-custom revenue. EPYC processor revenue grew by a strong double digit percentage sequentially driven by robust shipments of our second generation EPYC processors. EESC segment operating income was $45 million, or 10% of revenue, driven by EPYC process sales, compared to an operating loss of $6 million a year ago.

During the quarter, we reduced gross debt by $524 million, which resulted in a GAAP loss of $128 million. These debt reductions result in an annualized interest expense saving of approximately $16 million. Free cash flow was positive $400 million in the fourth quarter, and cash flow from operation was $442 million. Inventory was $1 billion down 6% from the prior quarter. Fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA was $469 million compared to $152 million a year ago, driven by higher quarterly earnings.

Full Year Results

2019 revenue was $6.73 billion, up 4% YoY driven by strong growth in Computing and Graphics segment and sales of second generation EPYC processors, partially offset by a decline in semi-custom sales. Excluding semi-custom, revenue was up more than 20% year over year. Gross Margin of 43% was up 420 basis points from the prior year, driven by our current generation of Ryzen and EPYC products. Operating expenses were 31% of revenue, as we increase go-to-market activities and investments in R&D. 2019 operating income was up 33% from a year ago to $840 million, or 12% of revenue. Net income was $756 million, up 47% from the prior year.

Turning to the balance sheet, I'm extremely pleased with our progress on the strengthening balance sheet. Cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities total $1.5 billion at year end, while gross debt was $563 million. This represents our highest net cash position since the third quarter of 2006. Full year free cash flow was $276 million. We reduced principal debt by almost $1 billion in 2019, and ended the year with less than $600 million of gross debt. On a trailing 12 month basis, adjusted EBITDA was $1.1 billion, resulting in gross leverage of 0.5x, down from 1.9x at the end of 2018.

Outlook for 1Q 2020

We expect revenue to be approximately $1.8 billion, plus or minus $50 million, an increase of approximately 42% year over year, and a decrease of approximately 15% sequentially. The year over year increase expected to be driven by strong growth in Ryzen, EPYC, and Radeon product sales. The sequential decrease is driven primarily by negligible semi-custom revenue, which continues to soften in advance of the ramp of next generation products, in addition to seasonality.

In addition, for Q1 2020, we expect non-GAAP gross margin to be approximately 46%. [We expect] Non-GAAP operating expenses to be approximately $580 million, non-GAAP interest, expense, taxes, and other to be approximately $18 million, and the first quarter diluted share count is expected to be approximately 1.22 billion shares.

Outlook for FY2020

For the full year 2020, we expect revenue growth of approximately 28 to 30%, driven by strength across all businesses. We expect non-GAAP gross margin, to be approximately 45%, non-GAAP operating expenses to be approximately 28% of revenue, and a non-GAAP tax rate of approximately 3% of pre-tax income.

In closing, we had an excellent fourth quarter, and an excellent 2019. Our full year financial results highlight the strength of our business model. I look forward to what we have in store for 2020 as we expect to further expand and ramp our leadership portfolio of high performance products to drive revenue growth, gross margin expansion, market share gains and financial momentum.

AMD Conference Call CEO Prepared Remarks Slide Deck
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  • TheJian - Sunday, February 2, 2020 - link

    Spoken like someone who doesn't own stocks or know how to read a balance sheet/Q report. No argument with the data...Sounds like a democrat...ROFL.

    If you are rich, you BUY the foot in the door. Ask Intel. 3B slide of what they will blow to hurt AMD who as the slide noted only made 300mil (.3B in the slide...LOL). Reviews prove you're a competitor, no need to discount your crap unless it is, well, crap. No point in getting a foot in the door if you make nothing doing it.

    Finance posts bring a few people who actually get it (because we trade this stuff! Or want company X to succeed), and a ton of people like you with NOTHING to add to the conversation. I know the value of nothing, it's equal to your post :) I know the cost of fools like you. Bankruptcy. AMD had to sell everything they owned to get here. There is nothing left to sell. At some point you have to realize you are doing it wrong. Sad they keep thinking like losers, largely because they listen to losers ;) See NVDA/INTC Q reports for how to get this right.

    You must be a bernie fan right? How much will your plans cost bernie asked the reporter? "Nobody knows"...WTF? He said that on right on TV in an interview.
    https://www.bizpacreview.com/2020/01/25/sanders-le...

    SJW BS. blah blah...NO, business is about money (you have to make some to stay in business). AMD is wasting valuable time making people like YOU happy instead of shareholders. No point in being in until they make bank that is rational for their share price. IF they don't start doing that, you will see another plummet. I'm out for quite a while now. Extra silicon not coming until later this year, so dead money until we find out if it's going to crap (console type junk at no margin), or higher margin stuff like HEDT/server/big gpu.
  • Spunjji - Monday, February 3, 2020 - link

    Solid assessment. Looks like you triggered "The Jian" though...
  • TheJian - Sunday, February 2, 2020 - link

    paul graham's hierarchy of disagreement. Google that then come back :)

    Need a safe zone? Wake me when you make a point about data. I'm here for the financial report, don't see anyone attacking the data. That is exactly what I set out to do. See if anyone can argue with my points. NOPE.

    Don't agree with your idea of an insult. It is not one IMHO, a retard should not be running your company...LOL. That is just reality. Whatever SJW. Keep on being pointless.
  • Spunjji - Monday, February 3, 2020 - link

    "I'm not mad, I'm laughing, HA HA HA HA"
  • m53 - Wednesday, January 29, 2020 - link

    Ian just casually forgot to mention the lackluster guidance in the title although the guidance is the main reason the stock is getting butchered now (7.22% down already).
  • tetse88319 - Thursday, January 30, 2020 - link

    still gotta remember q1 2019 was 1.27 billion, q1 2020 - projected at 1.8 billion. Yes it came below the analysts but it's still a win!
  • tetse88319 - Thursday, January 30, 2020 - link

    As Lisa said, amd is on a journey, a multi-year journey. The stock just simply got ahead of itself. If we were trading at $40, stock would've jumped.
  • tetse88319 - Thursday, January 30, 2020 - link

    q1 2018 was 1.65 billlion, but that was the cyrptorush. All gpus were sold out oft he channel. Gross margin in q1 2018 was 36%, gross margin in 2019 was 41%. Gross margin in 2020 is going to be 45%.
  • Spunjji - Friday, January 31, 2020 - link

    And now it's going back up, because the majority of investors DGAF and are looking at their long-term viability.

    A title's a title, it contains the most important bits. Temporary fluctuations based on guidance aren't that important.
  • m53 - Monday, February 3, 2020 - link

    @Spunjji O yeah, "guidance aren't that important" for a company with a massive P/E. Then what's their valuation is based on?... Oh wait... Your name sounds familiar. Aren't you the self proclaimed "pro-troll" from the other article? Where's your alts?

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