Chipmaker AMD
has posted a $611m net loss for the first quarter of 2007, as the company
struggles to compete with
Intel.
AMD warned earlier this month that its revenues would fall short of the
company's forecasts by about $400m. The chipmaker reported first-quarter revenue
of $1.23bn, down 30 per cent on the previous quarter.
"After more than three years of successfully executing our customer expansion
strategy and significantly growing our unit and revenue base, our first quarter
performance is disappointing and unacceptable," said Robert Rivet, chief
financial officer at AMD.
AMD announced a corporate restructuring earlier this month that will cut
costs by $500m a year. But Rivet stressed that customers remain confident about
the company's strategic direction and products.
At the time AMD blamed its revenue drop on increased competition from Intel
and at the same time slashed its prices by up to 40 per cent in an attempt to
grow its market share.
The chipmaker lost nearly $574m in the previous quarter, $551m of which was
related to the
acquisition of
ATI. The takeover
and integration of the graphics chip maker accounted for $113m in costs in the
first quarter.
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