AMD earnings face even more scrutiny after 'astonishingly bad' Intel outlook

Advanced Micro Devices Inc. gets to show Wall Street if it “certainly” ended 2022 in a better place, after the price of clearing inventory helped gut results from rival Intel Corp.

AMD
AMD,
+0.32%
is scheduled to report earnings after the close of markets on Tuesday.

AMD Chief Executive Lisa Su said three months ago that the company’s outlook, which fell below Wall Street estimates at the time, included the cost of clearing out inventory, and that the company would “certainly exit the year in a better place.” Su also said that data-center sales were “expected to grow.”

Doubts about data-center demand and the cost of excess inventory have grown though, after Intel
INTC,
-6.41%
reported earnings that showed inventory clearance was gutting gross margins as the CPU maker faced the worst PC shipment declines in recorded history. Additionally, Intel said it expected the overall data-center market to fall at “an accelerated rate.”

Read: ‘It’s not an earnings release, it’s a crime scene’: Analysts, and social media, react to Intel’s awful quarter

Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon, who downgraded AMD to market perform from outperform recently, said AMD had “no margin for error” in its report, and this was before he saw Intel’s “astonishingly bad” outlook fail to beat already low expectations “with revenues and gross margins collapsing amid a further weakening environment and an absolutely massive inventory flush.”

Rasgon said the PC market has worsened considerably, to the point where his “belief that AMD would prove relatively more immune to channel degradation proved unfortunately incorrect.”

And with jammed channels, another analyst’s forecast from nearly two years ago appears to be coming to fruition: Intel is resorting to a price war, or what Rasgon called “Intel’s semi-destructive behavior as of late as they use both price and capacity as a strategic weapon.”

“In response, we have seen AMD’s new client parts available at heavy discounts at retail less than 2 months after launch (much deeper, and much more rapidly than the prior generation),” Rasgon said.

Opinion: Intel just had its worst year since the dot-com bust, and it won’t get better soon

AMD, Intel, and Nvidia Corp.
NVDA,
+2.84%
had all poured new models of gaming cards into the holiday channel at a time when PC shipments are dropping at their steepest recorded rates and a wave of secondhand graphics-processing units, or GPUs, hit the market as unprofitable cryptocurrency-mining operations folded. 

“AMD stock should be bigger focus and PC fears are high there despite share gain expectations in server,” Mizuho desk analyst Jordan Klein said in emailed comments. “My view is buyside wants AMD to guide maybe flat growth for ’23 vs cons 5% due to PC flush, then start to slowly buy that weak guide.”

This will be the first report for AMD since it announced the hiring of Jean Hu from Marvell Technology Inc.
MRVL,
-0.32%
as its new chief financial officer. Hu started at AMD on Jan. 23, succeeding the retiring Devinder Kumar.

Read: AMD is making history for Asian women executives

You May Also Like

Crypto should be regulated with existing law, says former FDIC head

The collapse of the cryptocurrency exchange FTX shows that US regulators must…

Dow gains nearly 200 points, Nasdaq on pace for 4th day of gains as Wall Street awaits inflation data

U.S. stocks were higher in afternoon trade on Wednesday as the market…

Keir Starmer to stress Labour’s green credentials at COP28 summit

Sir Keir Starmer will seek to underline a political divide with Rishi…

RWE warns UK tax on electricity generators would risk £15bn investment in renewables

The head of RWE has warned that Germany’s biggest utility will reconsider…