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Forums - PC Discussion - AMD fires 9% of staff

http://m.apnews.com/ap/db_11704/contentdetail.htm?contentguid=0mRJPfVp

AMD to cut 1,100 workers, 9 pct of staff

By JORDAN ROBERTSON
Published: Jan 16, 2009

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Advanced Micro Devices Inc. plans to cut 1,100 jobs, 9 percent of its global staff, and slash the remaining employees' pay as the chip maker hopes its third round of layoffs in a year can help it get through a brutal market for computer sales.

The Sunnyvale, Calif.-based company said Friday that 900 workers will have their positions cut. The rest of the reductions are coming from attrition and the previously announced sale of a business unit.

The company has 15,000 workers currently, but it is spinning off its manufacturing operations, which have 3,000 employees who are not affected by Friday's announcement. So AMD's cut of 1,100 jobs amounts to 9 percent of the remaining 12,000 workers.

The firings represent AMD's third round of major layoffs in the last year. AMD cut 600 workers just last month, and earlier in 2008 jettisoned 1,600.

Pay for workers who survive the cuts will shrink. AMD's CEO Dirk Meyer and executive chairman Hector Ruiz, the former CEO, will see their salaries slashed by 20 percent. Vice presidents and other top management will have their pay cut 15 percent, other salaried workers will go down 10 percent, and pay for hourly workers will fall 5 percent. AMD said the pay cuts are temporary. AMD was not specific about how pay would be cut in other countries.

AMD shares fell 2 cents, or 0.9 percent, to $2.24 in afternoon trading Friday.

AMD is in the throes of a big restructuring that has seen it change CEOs, sell nearly a fifth of the company to an investment arm of the Persian Gulf state of Abu Dhabi, and agree to break off its factories in a moneysaving move.

AMD is the smaller rival of Intel Corp., the world's biggest semiconductor company, and has struggled with product delays, huge debt from its $5.6 billion acquisition of graphics chip maker ATI Technologies, and the inability to outspend Intel on developing new technologies.

AMD's announcement came a day after Intel reported that fourth-quarter profits dropped 90 percent and sales fell 23 percent, a sign of the severity of the slowdown facing both companies, which provide nearly all the microprocessors for the world's PCs.

AMD, which reports its fourth-quarter results on Thursday, has already warned that its sales will come in 33 percent lower than a year ago. Over the past eight quarters, AMD has lost $5.6 billion, and analysts aren't expecting relief any time soon.

AMD also revealed in a regulatory filing that it plans to write down ATI's value by an additional $684 million, which will appear in the quarterly results next week. AMD had previously slashed ATI's value by nearly $2.5 billion. Taken together, the charges now mean AMD believes ATI is worth less than half what AMD paid for it.




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Damn, AMD is just shrinking and shrinking.

Layoffs, lower salaries.

AMD revenue already has shrunk to pre-ATI aquisition levels (rufly $5.5 billion, right after the ATI buy they were at $7.5 billion) and now they warn that "sales will come in 33 percent lower than a year ago"?

Selling the manufacturing business - I hate that one the most.

Are we looking at a $3.5 billion company to compete with Intel's $35 billion revenue?



Slimebeast said:
Damn, AMD is just shrinking and shrinking.

Layoffs, lower salaries.

AMD revenue already has shrunk to pre-ATI aquisition levels (rufly $5.5 billion, right after the ATI buy they were at $7.5 billion) and now they warn that "sales will come in 33 percent lower than a year ago"?

Selling the manufacturing business - I hate that one the most.

Are we looking at a $3.5 billion company to compete with Intel's $35 billion revenue?

 

it doesnt help that AMD hasnt even tried to compete with Intel since the Athlon X2 series.



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Well, Phenom II is competitive on price and performance with the Core 2s - the 940 is a better choice than the Q9400 and the 920 over the Q8300.

The launch of Socket AM3 stuff should boost that, because they're bumping the clock speed to 3.1GHz, adding DDR3 memory and raising the northbridge/HT clock. That should make it rival the Q9550.

Basically they need to survive until Bulldozer in 2011. I don't see how deneb will be competitive all of that time, what with mainstream Nehalem in Q3, 32nm Nehalem "Westmere" in Q4 and Sandy Bridge in 2010.



Scary for the next XBox. NVidia and MS don't get along very well anymore. If ATI suffers from this, the next XBox could be delayed in a big way.



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You know what's really refreshing about this story? Upper management taking a pay cut along with labour, and a steeper cut at that. It's nice to see the honchos taking some responsiblity, even if it is cold consolation to those who lost their jobs.

I hope AMD pulls through. I've gotta respect a corporate culture like that.



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famousringo said:
You know what's really refreshing about this story? Upper management taking a pay cut along with labour, and a steeper cut at that. It's nice to see the honchos taking some responsiblity, even if it is cold consolation to those who lost their jobs.

I hope AMD pulls through. I've gotta respect a corporate culture like that.

Yeah I've heard of such practices being a staple of Japanese business culture. Never thought I'd see a western company inact similar policies.

 



Darc Requiem said:
famousringo said:
You know what's really refreshing about this story? Upper management taking a pay cut along with labour, and a steeper cut at that. It's nice to see the honchos taking some responsiblity, even if it is cold consolation to those who lost their jobs.

I hope AMD pulls through. I've gotta respect a corporate culture like that.

Yeah I've heard of such practices being a staple of Japanese business culture. Never thought I'd see a western company inact similar policies.

 

They're desperate. They need their staff to produce an R&D miracle to beat Intel from behind, on a budget a tenth the size, as fast as possible. The paycut would hurt morale unless the CEO made it look neccessary by taking one himself.

 



Groucho said:
Scary for the next XBox. NVidia and MS don't get along very well anymore. If ATI suffers from this, the next XBox could be delayed in a big way.

ATI could still survive even if AMD goes under I guess... Depends on how much consolidation there was between AMD and ATI.

However I think AMD may be playing things smartly by spinning off manufacturing... It should make it easier to survive a potential bankruptcy without having to shed critical assets in a hurry.

 



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NJ5 said:
Groucho said:
Scary for the next XBox. NVidia and MS don't get along very well anymore. If ATI suffers from this, the next XBox could be delayed in a big way.

ATI could still survive even if AMD goes under I guess... Depends on how much consolidation there was between AMD and ATI.

However I think AMD may be playing things smartly by spinning off manufacturing... It should make it easier to survive a potential bankruptcy without having to shed critical assets in a hurry.

 

Yes, I think ATI would be spun off or sold off in the event of bankruptcy (though neither Intel nor Nvidia would be allowed to buy it). It's the only profitable part of AMD.

The fab spinoff was a smart move because only the Arabs have the confidence to (effectively) lend AMD cash during this recession (the banks certainly wouldn't.) They still maintain 50% voting stake in the fabs, will be the majority customer for sure especially after ATI starts production there, and get the capital to maintain process parity with Intel which takes serious cash that AMD doesn't have.