MI325X


2024-10-30

[News] AMD Raises Full-year AI Chip Sales Projection to USD 5 Billion though Q4 Forecast Fails to Impress

AMD posted third-quarter results on October 29th, with a quarterly revenue of USD 6.8 billion and net income to USD 771 million, while data center revenue surged 122% year-over-year. With new products such as MI300X hitting the market, the world’s second largest data center GPU provider also raises its AI chip sales forecast for this year to USD 5 billion, up from an earlier estimate of USD 4.5 billion, according to a report by CNBC.

For the fourth quarter of 2024, according to the company’s press release, AMD expects revenue to be approximately USD 7.5 billion, plus or minus USD 300 million. At the mid-point of the revenue range, this represents year-over-year growth of approximately 22% and sequential growth of approximately 10%. Non-GAAP gross margin is expected to be approximately 54%.

Fourth Quarter Forecast Falls to Impress; Concerns Raised on Capacity Constraints

However, the fourth-quarter forecast is slightly below market expectations, which raises concerns about whether the growth of the AI sector might be slowing down. According to Bloomberg, analysts had an average estimate of USD 7.55 billion.

AMD CEO Lisa Su reiterated that the company still sees robust momentum in AI, as interest from customers and partners in the MI325X is strong, a report by CNBC notes. AMD plans to begin production shipments of the MI325X this quarter, according to Su.

In October, AMD introduced the MI325X, and projected that the AI GPU market could reach USD 500 billion by 2028.

Nonetheless, Su also said that the environment will “continue to be tight”, but AMD has also planned for significant growth going into 2025, according to Bloomberg. She stated that the company feels good “about our overall supply-chain capability,” Bloomberg indicates.

AMD’s major foundry partner, TSMC, indicated in July that constraints on AI chip production will persist into 2025, which may imply a significant hurdle for clients like AMD, as it not only has to compete with NVIDIA on product performance, but also on the race of securing capacity.

Strong Data Center Revenue with 122% YoY Increase, while Gaming/ Embedded on the Decline

For the third quarter of 2024, AMD delivered a quarterly revenue of USD 6.8 billion, gross margin of 50%, operating income of USD 724 million, net income of USD 771 million and diluted earnings per share of USD 0.47. On a non-GAAP basis, gross margin was 54%, operating income was USD 1.7 billion, net income was USD 1.5 billion and diluted earnings per share was USD 0.92.

AMD’s AI chips are included in its data center segment, which saw annual sales more than double, reaching USD 3.5 billion. Overall, data center revenue rose 122% year-over-year. Su attributed the strong results to higher sales of EPYC and Instinct data center products and robust demand for the Ryzen PC processors, according to AMD’s press release.

The company also sees robust growth in its client segment, as revenue was USD 1.9 billion, up 29% year-over-year and 26% sequentially primarily driven by strong demand for “Zen 5” AMD Ryzen processors.

However, the gaming segment revenue was USD 462 million, down 69% year-over-year and 29% sequentially primarily due to a decrease in semi-custom revenue. According to CNBC, this could be attributed to reduced “semi-custom revenue” from custom chips used in consoles like the Sony PlayStation 5.

Embedded segment revenue was also declining, down 25% year-over-year to USD 927 million, as customers normalized their inventory levels. On a sequential basis, revenue increased 8% as demand improved in several end markets.

Read more

(Photo credit: AMD)

Please note that this article cites information from CNBC, Bloomberg and AMD.
2024-10-11

[News] AMD Unveils its Latest AI Accelerators MI325X and MI355X, with TSMC Emerges as the Major Beneficiary

As AMD unveiled the roadmap for its upcoming AI accelerators at Advancing AI 2024, including MI325X and MI355X, its longtime foundry partner TSMC is expected to be the major beneficiary, according to the reports by the Commercial Times and the Economic Daily News.

TSMC, as AMD’s key chip making partner, is expected to benefit the most, as the foundry giant also provides advanced packaging services such chiplets and CoWoS, Commercial Times notes.

Other Taiwanese companies in the supply chain are also expected to benefit, including ASMedia, which provides PCIe Gen5 high-speed interface chips, as well as ASIC firms GUC and Alchip, according to the report. Among server OEM partners, Compal, Wistron, Wiwynn, and Inventec are listed as AMD’s collaborators.

According to the Economic Daily News, AMD’s Instinct MI325X AI accelerator is said to be manufactured with TSMC’s 4nm and 5nm, with mass production anticipated to begin this quarter. It is worth noting that the AI GPU would be the first of its kind to be equipped with 256GB HBM3e memory, according to another report by Wccftech.

On the other hand, to compete with AI chip giant NVIDIA’s GB200, AMD also introduced the MI350 series at the event. According to Commercial Times, MI355X will be launched in the second half of 2025, leveraging TSMC’s 3nm process while equipped with 288GB HBM3e memory.

The report by Commercial Times further notes that in addition to its larger memory capacity, the MI355X accelerator also incorporates the CDNA 4 architecture, allowing it to achieve a significant 35x increase in FP8 computational performance.

Featuring TSMC’s 3nm node just like NVIDIA’s Rubin reportedly does, AMD’s MI355X has the potential to catch up with, or even run ahead of its archrival in terms of product schedule, the report suggests. NVIDIA’s Rubin is reportedly to be released in the fourth quarter of 2025.

Notably, AMD’s MI300X accelerator has been reportedly adopted by a few tech heavyweights. According to Commercial Times, following Microsoft’s adoption, Samsung has also purchased USD 20 million worth of AMD MI300X units for AI training.

At Advancing AI 2024, which took place on October 10th, AMD also introduced its latest EPYC server processors, EPYC 9005 Series, previously codenamed Turin. According to its press release, the EPYC 9005 Series is built on the latest “Zen 5” architecture, which offers up to 192 cores and will be available in a wide range of platforms from leading OEMs and ODMs. According to the Economic Daily News, EPYC 9005 Series is manufactured with TSMC’s 3nm and 4nm nodes.

Read more

(Photo credit: AMD)

Please note that this article cites information from Commercial Times, the Economic Daily NewsWccftech and AMD.
  • Page 1
  • 1 page(s)
  • 2 result(s)

Get in touch with us