Today AMD released their Q1 FY 2015 financial results, and the company reported revenue of $1.03 billion for the quarter. This is a 16.9% decrease as compared to Q4 2014, and a 26.4% decrease from the $1.40 billion recorded in Q1 2014. Operating income based on GAAP numbers was an operating loss of $137 million, which is a substantial decrease in loss as compared to Q4 2014, where they had an operating loss of $330 million, however in Q1 2014 they had a small operating income of $49 million, so although they have improved quarter-over-quarter, that is a significant reduction year-over-year. Net loss for the quarter was $180 million, or $0.23 per share, which once again is better than Q4 2014 where there was a $364 million ($0.47/share) loss, but much worse than the $20 million ($0.03/share) loss in Q1 2014.

AMD Q1 2015 Financial Results (GAAP)
  Q1'2015 Q4'2014 Q1'2014
Revenue $1.03B $1.24B $1.40B
Gross Margin 32% 29% 35%
Operating Income -$137M -$330M $49M
Net Income -$180M -$364M -$20M
Earnings Per Share -$0.23 -$0.47 -$0.03M

Part of these losses are due to the ongoing restructuring at AMD, which has contributed heavily to these numbers. One of the new restructuring fees is due to the exit from the Seamicro branded dense server business, which has cost them an additional $75 million this quarter, including $7 million in cash. Due to these hits, AMD also provides Non-GAAP results which exclude these numbers. On a Non-GAAP basis, AMD’s operating loss is just $30 million, however that is still down significantly from the $89 million operating income in Q1 2014, and the $52 million operating income from last quarter. Net loss on a Non-GAAP basis is $73 million, or $0.09 per share. This is a decline from Q4 2014 where there was a net income of $18 million ($0.02/share) and Q1 2014 where they were able to achieve a net income of $35 million ($0.05/share).

AMD Q1 2015 Financial Results (Non-GAAP)
  Q1'2015 Q4'2014 Q1'2014
Revenue $1.03B $1.24B $1.40B
Gross Margin 32% 34% 35%
Operating Income -$30M $52M $89M
Net Income -$73M $18M $35M
Earnings Per Share -$0.09 $0.02 $0.05M

AMD has also entered into a fifth amendment of their agreement with GlobalFoundries, and AMD is expecting to purchase about $1 billion in wafers in 2015.

Breaking down their product segments, the Computing and Graphics segment had a 20% decline in revenue quarter-over-quarter, and a 38% decrease year-over-year, with Q1 having net revenues of $532 million. The quarterly decrease was due to lower desktop and notebook processor sales, whereas the yearly decrease was due to lower desktop processor sales and GPU channel sales. The division had an operating loss of $75 million for the quarter, which is a significant change from the $56 million loss last quarter and the $3 million income in Q1 2014. The loss was partially offset by lower operating expenses, but clearly more work is needed. AMD is hoping for better success with their new APU, Carrizo, which they are expecting to deliver double digit performance increases and much better energy efficiency compared to Kaveri, which is the current APU.

AMD Q1 2015 Computing and Graphics
  Q1'2015 Q4'2014 Q1'2014
Revenue $532M $662M $861M
Operating Income -$75M -$56M $3M

The Enterprise, Embedded and Semi-Custom segment had a year-over-year revenue decrease of 7%, and a quarter-over-quarter decrease of 14%, with Q1 2015 coming in at $498 million. The quarterly drop is due to a seasonal decrease in semi-custom SoC sales (read: Consoles had a ramp up for the holidays and are now back to lower sales) and the yearly decrease is due to lower numbers of server processors being sold. However this segment did have an operating income to report of $45 million for the quarter, but this is down from the $109 million in Q4 2014 and $85 million in Q1 2014.

AMD Q1 2015 Enterprise, Embedded and Semi-Custom
  Q1'2015 Q4'2014 Q1'2014
Revenue $498M $577M $536M
Operating Income $45M $109M $85M

The “All Other” segment had an operating loss of $107 million. As compared to Q1 2014, this is $68 million more operating loss, which is primarily due to the $75 million hit for exiting the dense server business. In Q4 2014 this segment had a $383 million loss.

For Q2, AMD is forecasting revenue being down an additional 3%, plus or minus 3%, and non-GAAP Gross Margin to remain flat at 32%.

AMD is certainly not in a great position right now, and the new CEO Dr. Lisa Su has some work to do in order to get AMD back to a financially viable state. Part of that is diversifying revenues, especially with the PC market slowing again. AMD has not had a significant product launch in a few quarters, which has not helped either.

Source: AMD Investor Relations

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  • silverblue - Saturday, April 18, 2015 - link

    Engineers need resources. Let's hope that Zen is practically finished by now.
  • costeakai - Sunday, April 19, 2015 - link

    paper zen.
  • costeakai - Sunday, April 19, 2015 - link

    if paper zen is 98% ready, i believe there's time and enaugh money to make flesh&blood zen, next year
  • silverblue - Sunday, April 19, 2015 - link

    If they're hoping to release it in a year, you'd hope they would have prototypes by now. We usually hear such things, however, and it'd help their stock price.
  • jabber - Friday, April 17, 2015 - link

    Another bizarre trait I find with some AMD fans is that they get annoyed when folks say AMD need to sell more product (usually the basis of most businesses). Instead they just keep going on about how future paper designs will save the day.

    Somehow.

    Been a long time waiting on that strategy. Either start pushing your chips into decent products people want to buy or just give up.
  • meacupla - Saturday, April 18, 2015 - link

    I'm going to hazard a guess and say it's because AMD doesn't have a single chip capable of making products decent.
    AMD chips run too hot, consume too much power and are slower when you compare them to offerings from nvidia and Intel.

    And it's not just the chips, but the technology behind it has also been lacking. Quick encoding (quicksync, NVENC), or game streaming, has basically killed the purpose of having separate computers in the house, which an AMD A8/10 could have filled in for. All you need is one good computer to run everything off of, and then an ARM device can easily display the results without needing massive computing power itself.
    And I do realize AMD has VCE, but the software support has been extremely slow for it.
  • webdoctors - Friday, April 17, 2015 - link

    I find this part to be really scary:

    Computing and Graphics segment had a 20% decline in revenue quarter-over-quarter, and 38 percent from Q1 2014. The sequential decrease was primarily due to lower desktop and notebook processor sales and the annual decrease was driven by lower desktop processor sales and GPU channel sales.

    That's a HUGE drop (38%). Not sure how you can recover from that.
  • Da W - Friday, April 17, 2015 - link

    That's it, AMD's dead :(

    -AMD fan
  • D. Lister - Sunday, April 19, 2015 - link

    Don't worry. Someone would buy them off. New administration with new money could be just the thing that the brand needs. I personally am hoping that Intel takes the GPU side and Samsung grabs the CPU. Then we would have some real competition in the market.
  • nunya112 - Saturday, April 18, 2015 - link

    Hitler reacts to R9 300 delays
    http://meemsy.com/v/31509

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