As Q1 earnings season continues to roll along, on deck today is AMD, who is getting the privilege of reporting some very positive earnings for the first three months of 2021. Firing on all cylinders – CPU, GPU, and semi-custom – AMD’s numerous product launches over the last several months are now paying major dividends for the company, as everything AMD is in high demand. And indeed, AMD is the poster child for the current chip crunch, as the company is making everything it can and even after selling over 3.4 billion dollars’ worth of chips in Q1, it’s still not enough.

For the first quarter of 2021, AMD reported $3.45B in revenue, making for another staggering jump over a year-ago quarter for AMD, when the company made just $1.79B in what was their best first quarter in a decade. For 2021 it’s now all about setting (and beating) records for the company, as evidenced by the 93% leap in year-over-year revenue.

AMD’s big run-up in revenue is also reflected in the company’s other metrics; along with that revenue AMD’s net income has grown by 243% year-over-year, now reaching $555M. And if not for an unusual, one-off tax benefit for AMD last quarter, Q1’21 would be AMD’s most profitable quarter ever – and indeed is on a non-GAAP basis. Meanwhile AMD’s gross margin is holding at 46%, steady versus Q4 and up one percentage point versus the year-ago quarter.

AMD Q1 2021 Financial Results (GAAP)
  Q1'2021 Q1'2020 Q4'2020 Y/Y Q/Q
Revenue $3.45B $1.79B $3.2B +93% +6%
Gross Margin 46% 46% 45% Flat +1pp
Operating Income $662M $177M $570M +274% +16%
Net Income $555M $162M $1781M* +243% -69%
Earnings Per Share $0.45 $0.14 $1.45 +221% -69%

One more the flag bearer for AMD is their Computing and Graphics segment, which encompasses their desktop and notebook CPU sales, as well as their GPU sales. That division booked $2.1B in revenue for the quarter, $662M (46%) more than Q1 2020. Accordingly, the segment’s operating income is (once more) up significantly as well, going from $262M a year ago to $485M this year.

As always, AMD doesn’t provide a detailed breakout of information from this segment, but they have provided some selective information on revenue and average selling prices (ASPs). Overall, client CPU sales were quite strong; according to AMD Ryzen processor sales are up overall, as are ASPs, on both a quarterly and yearly basis. The big wins appear to be coming from premium devices such as ultra-thin laptops and gaming devices, especially as notebook revenue is up once again, setting a sixth consecutive record for AMD. On which note, according to AMD their Ryzen 5000 mobile (Cezanne) revenue has ramped up twice as fast as the mobile 4000 series (Renoir), underscoring AMD’s continuing push into mobile.

Meanwhile the company is reporting similarly good news from their GPU business. Sales and ASPs are up due to the launch and ongoing sales of various Radeon RX 6000 products. Overall, AMD’s Radeon RX 6000 revenue has more than doubled versus Q4, as the company scrambles to make as many GPUs as it can in a very GPU-starved market.

AMD Q1 2021 Reporting Segments
  Q1'2021 Q1'2020 Q4'2020
Computing and Graphics
Revenue $2100M $1438M $1960M
Operating Income $485M $262M $420M
Enterprise, Embedded and Semi-Custom
Revenue $1345M $348M $1284M
Operating Income $277M -$26M $243M

Meanwhile AMD’s Enterprise, Embedded, and Semi-Custom segment has seen an explosion of growth of its own over the past year, thanks to the launch of AMD’s third-gen EPYC (Milan) processors, as well as the 9th generation consoles. This segment of the company booked $1.35B in revenue, $997M (286%) more than what they pulled in for Q1’20. It’s such a strong performance that it’s even up on a quarterly basis, more than offsetting the usual seasonal decline in semi-custom sales that occurs in Q1.

The big jump in revenue also means that the segment is well into the black on an operating income basis, a major improvement over Q1’20 where AMD lost money on the segment. $277M on $1345M in revenue is not quite as strong as what AMD’s computing segment pulls off, but this is a long-standing artifact of bundling AMD’s low-margin semi-custom business with its high-margin (and ever increasing) enterprise CPU business.

Overall, semi-custom sales were down slightly for Q1’21 versus Q4’20 (“by a single digit percentage”), which was more than offset by increased EPYC processor sales, thanks to the launch of AMD’s third-generation (Milan) EPYC processors. On the latter, AMD had another record quarter, as EPYC processor sales have more than doubled on a year-over-year basis and a “double-digit percentage” on a quarterly basis.

On a side note, if there’s any single metric in AMD’s latest earnings announcement that underscores just how much things have turned around for a company that nearly went bankrupt half a decade ago, it’s the company’s cash balance: AMD is sitting on $3.1B in cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments. Conversely, long-term debt is down to $313M. At this point AMD is in a stronger financial position than they ever have been before.

Looking forward, AMD’s expectations for the quarter and for the rest of the year are as equally lofty as the preceding quarters. Demand for AMD chips still outpaces supply in most segments thanks to the ongoing chip crunch and substrate supply issues, so AMD has yet to fully tap the current market, let alone prepare for any further growth in product demand. Consequently, AMD is projecting some very rosy figures for Q2’21 and for the full year. The company expects to book $3.6B (+/- $100M) in revenue for Q2, which if it comes to pass will be an 86% jump over Q2’20. Meanwhile AMD has revised their full year 2021 projections, and are now expecting total revenue to increase by 50% versus their $9.8B FY2020.

As for AMD’s product lineup, while the company is now decidedly early-to-mid cycle on its CPU products, today’s earnings release does have some interesting GPU news. First up, AMD is still in the middle of launching its complete Navi 2x stack of GPUs and associated video cards. Along with continuing that launch on the desktop, the first mobile Radeon RX 6000 products are slated to launch later this quarter. And in the HPC space, AMD is expecting to ramp their next-generation Radeon Instinct products in the second half of the year, which will be going into the forthcoming Frontier supercomputer, among other projects.

Source: AMD

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  • Spunjji - Wednesday, April 28, 2021 - link

    I just wish I'd been able to afford to buy AMD stock back in the 'dozer days!
  • eva02langley - Wednesday, April 28, 2021 - link

    It is pointless to make such wish. It is like saying you should have bought bitcoin... or Nvidia... or Tesla... or Gamestop... or BB... or whatever... just move on.
  • mode_13h - Wednesday, April 28, 2021 - link

    > bitcoin, Tesla, Gamestop

    The crypto bubble is gonna crash. Crypto won't completely go away, but I wouldn't be buying into bitcoin, right now.

    Tesla is priced beyond perfection. Reality will eventually catch up.

    Gamestop never made a whole lot of sense. For every time there's a Gamestop scenario, there are probably 100 companies that didn't come back. If you're into gambling, go ahead and bet on a Gamestop. Professional investors usually stay well clear of stuff like that.
  • mode_13h - Wednesday, April 28, 2021 - link

    I wish I'd thought to, but Intel still seemed almost unstoppable, back then. For AMD, the best part of their product portfolio was their GPUs.
  • mode_13h - Wednesday, April 28, 2021 - link

    They should really buy a machine learning ASIC company. If they're serious about being a player in that space, then they can't just keep trying to use their GPUs (which have indeed come a long way, considering the MI100's new Matrix cores, but still...).
  • Targon - Wednesday, April 28, 2021 - link

    You may have missed the whole Xilinx purchase then. FPGA combined with AMD CPU and GPU technologies is going to surprise people with the synergies that come from it. Unlike Intel, which only saw adding FPGA as a way to diversify, AMD seems to understand the idea of combining multiple products that used to be in their own area and the resulting product be better than just the sum of its parts.

    Don't be surprised if not only machine learning will come of the Xilinx merger, but other things that most people couldn't understand until the fusion of the technologies has been around for a few years.
  • mode_13h - Wednesday, April 28, 2021 - link

    Thanks, but I most certainly did not miss it.

    FPGAs are useful for certain embedded usecases and as datacenter "glue", but they're no substitute for the power and efficiency of a purpose-built ASIC. FPGAs can't outperform Nvidia GPUs on machine learning, much less dedicated ASICS. They can't even deliver better perf/W on modern networks, either!

    The reason for this is simple. When you have something like a tensor core, it does the bulk of the computation with the efficiency of a dedicated ASIC, due to the amount of hardwired logic it contains. A FPGA with, discrete multipliers and adders that have to get linked together over longer distances, just can't compete on timing or power-efficiency. You can even stuff it with DSP cores and still watch them lag behind what Nvidia's tensor cores can do.

    And where ASICS really come into their own is that they ditch the graphics hardware, coherent caches, and 64-bit floating-point hardware of GPUs, often replacing it with more on-chip storage and more dataflow-optimized architectures.

    If AMD doesn't get into the machine learning ASIC game, they're going to be stuck on the sidelines. The MI100 is a good chip, but it still devotes too much silicon to HPC.

    I'm not saying they should run out and buy Cerebras, but it's not far off from where their heads should be at.
  • Farfolomew - Wednesday, April 28, 2021 - link

    These are good numbers for AMD, and I'm not trying to be too gloomy here, maybe just pointing out an aberration. But AMD's Semi-custom gross this last quarter vs 20q1 is a billion dollars more. If most of that is due to the consoles, and they've shipped most of their console chips already, will that revenue dry up and return to lower numbers?

    Their client and business revenue went from 20Q1's $1.4B to 21Q1's $2.1B, what a 25% increase? Considering the chip shortage, COVID, their existing momentum, release of Zen3, etc, I guess I'm not super impressed by that percentage increase, and thought it would be a lot more, especially for a small company on the verge of becoming big.
  • mode_13h - Wednesday, April 28, 2021 - link

    I think you yourself cited the reason it's not greater: chip shortage. AMD can't suddenly get more wafers than it already ordered and it can't just jack up prices -- it has to honor existing supply contracts and doesn't want to create bad blood with OEMs by squeezing them upon renewal.
  • Farfolomew - Thursday, April 29, 2021 - link

    Well I mentioned COVID as a positive for AMD; people bought more electronic gizmos and stayed inside, etc. But yeah it definitely seems to have impacted supplies too.

    What I really want to know is how good AMD would do if they weren't supply-limited. Or severely supply limited. How much sales to OEMs, big companies, end users, etc, are they leaving on the table because they can't make enough product?

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