Friday, November 4th 2011

AMD Optimizes Cost Structure to Enhance Competitiveness and Accelerate Growth

AMD announced a restructuring plan and implementation of operational efficiency initiatives designed to strengthen the company's competitive positioning. AMD expects that these combined actions will create a more competitive cost structure and rebalance the company's global workforce skillsets, helping AMD to continue delivering industry-leading products while improving productivity, reducing time-to-market and better aligning with key industry trends that are expected to drive growth.

"Reducing our cost structure and focusing our global workforce on key growth opportunities will strengthen AMD's competitiveness and allow us to aggressively pursue a balanced set of strategic activities designed to accelerate future growth," said Rory Read, AMD president and CEO. "The actions we are taking are designed to improve our ability to consistently address the needs of our global customer base and stake leadership positions in lower power, emerging markets and the cloud."

AMD expects that the restructuring plan will result in operational savings, primarily in operating expenses, of approximately $10 million in the fourth quarter of 2011 and $118 million in 2012, primarily through a reduction of its global workforce by approximately 10% and the termination of existing contractual commitments. The workforce reduction will occur across all functions globally and is expected to be substantially completed by the end of the first quarter of 2012. Based on anticipated savings from the restructuring plan, AMD expects fourth quarter 2011 operating expenses will be approximately $610 million.

As a result of implementing efficiencies across the company's operations, AMD expects to save approximately $90 million in 2012 operating expenses in addition to the restructuring plan savings, resulting in more than $200 million of expected combined operational savings in 2012.

The company expects to reinvest a significant portion of the savings to fund initiatives designed to accelerate AMD's strategies for lower power, emerging markets, and the cloud.

The company's actions pursuant to the restructuring plan will take place primarily during fourth quarter of 2011, with some restructuring plan activities extending into 2012. The company currently estimates that it will record restructuring expense in the fourth quarter of 2011 and in 2012 of approximately $101 million and $4 million, respectively. Of the total restructuring expense, approximately $56 million will be future cash expenditures in 2011, $33 million will be future cash expenditures in 2012 and $15 million will be future cash expenditures in 2013.
Add your own comment

29 Comments on AMD Optimizes Cost Structure to Enhance Competitiveness and Accelerate Growth

#26
Damn_Smooth
WarEagleAUIf you want them to go away, then I hope your happy with paying more for Intel. AMD I dont think is going anywhere, but its about time someone comes in and cleans up the crap. I Don't need them to whoop intel's ass like everyone else seems to want them to do. I just need them to be competitive, priced better, and have lower heat/energy. I myself will be getting me a new FX in the next 4 months.
I agree 100%. That's all I wanted from BD. Hopefully PD can deliver.
Posted on Reply
#27
xenocide
WarEagleAUIf you want them to go away, then I hope your happy with paying more for Intel. AMD I dont think is going anywhere, but its about time someone comes in and cleans up the crap. I Don't need them to whoop intel's ass like everyone else seems to want them to do. I just need them to be competitive, priced better, and have lower heat/energy. I myself will be getting me a new FX in the next 4 months.
If you really wanted the most competitively priced product, you would get an i5-2500k. It is on par or better than the best FX-Series CPU in 90% of applications, and costs a decent amount less.
Posted on Reply
#28
Damn_Smooth
xenocideIf you really wanted the most competitively priced product, you would get an i5-2500k. It is on par or better than the best FX-Series CPU in 90% of applications, and costs a decent amount less.
It is better in 100% of the applications that I use. That is why I'm going Ivy if PD is as disappointing as BD. I hope AMD can pull together, but all signs are pointing to that not being the case.
Posted on Reply
#29
Super XP
InceptorNo surprises there. This is the way they've been moving for a while, regardless of what everyone else thinks or wants of them.

Oh, there will be desktop chips, but after Piledriver, they'll be APUs, and only APUs (aka Fusion technology). They won't be competing with Intel at the high end, stop hoping. As always, they'll be in the low-to-mid verging on mid-high performance (best case with overclocking) markets.
No, don't agree, it looks like AMD fixed Bulldozer and right now the so called Bulldozer II is approx: 10% to 15% performance increase vs. todays Bulldozer. If this is the case I can expect more performance improvements by the time Piledriver gets released in Q1 2012.

semiaccurate.com/2011/11/04/getting-ready-for-trinity-yet/comment-page-1/#comment-12043
Posted on Reply
Add your own comment
May 5th, 2024 21:50 EDT change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts