2017 has been a great year for the tech enthusiast, with the return of meaningful competition in the PC space. Today, AMD announced their third quarter earnings, which beat expectations, and put the company’s ledgers back in the black in their GAAP earnings. For the quarter, AMD had revenues of $1.64 billion, compared to $1.31 billion a year ago, which is a gain of just over 25%. Operating income was $126 million, compared to a $293 million loss a year ago, and net income was $71 million, compared to a net loss of $406 million a year ago. This resulted in earnings per share of $0.07, compared to a loss per share of $0.50 in Q3 2016.

AMD Q3 2017 Financial Results (GAAP)
  Q3'2017 Q2'2017 Q3'2016
Revenue $1643M $1220M $1307M
Gross Margin 35% 33% 5%
Operating Income +$126M +$25M -$293M
Net Income +$71M -$16M -$406M
Earnings Per Share +$0.07 -$0.02 -$0.50

AMD also provides Non-GAAP results, which can give a look at the underlying business. It’s especially important this quarter, because a year ago, AMD took a charge of $340 million for an amendment to their wafer supply agreement with GlobalFoundries. This impacted their GAAP results severely, but as a one-time charge, it can skew how the numbers look. AMD’s Non-GAAP results exclude charges for the wafer agreement, loss on debt redemption, stock based compensation, and several other factors. On a Non-GAAP basis, AMD had the same revenue of $1.64 billion, up 25%. Operating income up 121% to $155 million, and net income was up 307% to $110 million. Earnings per share came in at $0.10, up 233% from $0.03 a year ago.

AMD Q3 2017 Financial Results (Non-GAAP)
  Q3'2017 Q2'2017 Q3'2016
Revenue $1643M $1222M $1307M
Gross Margin 33% 33% 31%
Operating Income +$155M +$49M +$70M
Net Income +$110M +$19M +$27M
Earnings Per Share +$0.10 +$0.02 +$0.03

The good news for AMD is that even on a GAAP basis, they were profitable. They’ve made some tough decisions to get here, and on a GAAP basis for this quarter, they have a gross margin of 35%, which is right where they need to be.

The Computing and Graphics segment has been a key to these numbers, with some impressive launches this year, especially on the CPU side. Revenue for this segment was up 74% to $819 million, and AMD attributes this to strong sales of both Radeon GPUs and Ryzen desktop processors. Average Selling Price (ASP) was also up significantly thanks to Ryzen sales. AMD is still undercutting Intel on price, but they don’t have to almost give things away like they did the last couple of years. ASP of GPUs was also up significantly, and the proliferation of cryptocurrency likely played a large part in that. Operating income for the segment was an impressive $70 million, compared to an operating loss of $66 million last year.

AMD Q3 2017 Computing and Graphics
  Q3'2017 Q2'2017 Q3'2016
Revenue $819M $659M $472M
Operating Income +$70M +$7M -$66M

The Enterprise, Embedded, and Semi-Custom segment has been strong for AMD in the past, often providing the majority of the operating income for the company thanks to AMD’s success in the console market. This quarter has tended to be especially strong for the company as the console makers prepare for the holiday sales. This quarter, we’ve also got the lead-up to the Xbox One X, however revenue for this group is actually down year-over-year, about 1.3%, to $824 million. AMD attributes that to lower semi-custom SoC sales, which were mostly offset by IP related and EPYC processor revenues. We’ll have to wait and see how the console market plays out here, but it seems like it could finally be slowing down after several years of solid sales. Operating income for this segment also took a hit, down 38% to $84 million. They’ve also noted that gross margins overall were impacted by costs associated with the wafer agreements for “certain wafers purchased at another foundry” which likely means the TSMC wafers used for consoles.

AMD Q3 2017 Enterprise, Embedded, and Semi-Custom
  Q3'2017 Q2'2017 Q3'2016
Revenue $824M $563M $835M
Operating Income $84M $42M $136M

The All Other category had a operating loss of $28 million, compared to an operating loss of $363 million a year ago, which was mostly the wafer agreement charges.

It’s great to see AMD back, offering quality products at good prices. The hard work has clearly paid off, at least for the short term, and their earnings have borne this out. Looking ahead to next quarter, AMD is expecting a revenue decrease from this quarter of about 15%, plus or minus 3%, which would be about a 26% increase from Q4 2016.

Source: AMD Investor Relations

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  • HStewart - Wednesday, October 25, 2017 - link

    "
    How is Nvidia going to compete with that? "

    Of course they do - there is need for dedicated GPU's in mobile side - and also in SLI on docking stations.

    Do you really believe that all GPU's on mobile side are Integrated? I have multiple laptops with NVidia GPU

    All I am saying for most customers ( mom and pops and even students ), the integrated GPU is all they will need. In fact a lot of this customers like my dad, really don't need a PC - maybe an iPad or Android will deal with them.

    For me, I see the PC ( desktop ) is on it way out, but tablets ( including ARM based ) and laptop here to stay. I however do see much value in Windows based ARM device.

    In my earlier days - desktops were only way to go - and NVidia was the best way go - Some people like ATI. I also found even building a desktop later on, it was nice to have Integrated GPU - just in case the card went bad - so at least I could recover the machine.
  • webdoctors - Wednesday, October 25, 2017 - link

    Finally they in the black! Hopefully this doesn't foreshadow the start of the next recession :P

    Should be even better once manufacturing ramps up assuming mining demand persists, and/or CPUs get cheaper.
  • yannigr2 - Wednesday, October 25, 2017 - link

    "We’ll have to wait and see how the console market plays out here, but it seems like it could finally be slowing down after several years of solid sales."

    We probably see the results of Nintendo's Switch in the market.
  • vladx - Thursday, October 26, 2017 - link

    "We probably see the results of Nintendo's Switch in the market."

    You do know Nintendo Switch uses no AMD parts, right?

    AMD fanbois these days can't even read a spec sheet.
  • vladx - Thursday, October 26, 2017 - link

    My bad, after re-reading your comment again I was wrong.
  • yannigr2 - Friday, October 27, 2017 - link

    Oh, my apologies then for my reaction. It was before reading your second post. It was in the next page and didn't notice.

    With Nintendo having sold more than 6 million Switch consoles, that definitely means a few millions less orders for AMD custom chips from Microsoft and Sony. We will probably see this when Nvidia releases it's financials next month.
  • yannigr2 - Friday, October 27, 2017 - link

    It's really gold seeing someone full of arrogance rushing in to talk about fanboys only to post something that is at least humiliating.

    Maybe spec sheets are the only thing you can read and understand.
    Switch NOT using AMD hardware WAS THE WHOLE POINT YOU MORON.
  • Manch - Thursday, October 26, 2017 - link

    The 2DXXXL err Switch is doing great. That, combined with the pending release of the new XBOX, a decline is to be expected. I was going to spring for a XB1-S but decided to get Switch instead. I like many others can wait for the new XBOX as the S just doesn't offer enough tangible improvements to justify its existence.

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