The results land after strong results from Intel, which is expanding its foundry business. AMD is benefiting from gaining share in the data center as well as PCs. The company reported second quarter earnings of 58 cents a share on revenue of $3.85 billion, up 99% from a year ago. Non-GAAP earnings were 63 cents a share. Wall Street was expecting AMD to report second quarter revenue of $3.62 billion with non-GAAP earnings of 54 cents a share. As for the outlook, AMD said it expects revenue for the third quarter will be about $4.1 billion give or take $100 million. That revenue growth, driven by AMD’s gaming and data center business, would be up 46% from a year ago. Wall Street was modeling third quarter revenue of $3.82 billion. More:
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For 2021, AMD is projecting revenue growth of about 60%, up from the 50% previously outlined. Gross margins for the year will be about 48%. AMD CEO Lisa Su said on an earnings conference call: Su added that AMD Advantage laptops from ASUS, HP, MSI and Lenovo will hit the market in coming months. In addition, AMD is seeing momentum in the data center. Su said: Other items: Cloud demand further accelerated in the quarter, led by growing internal workload adoption and nearly 50 new AMD-powered instances by AWS, Microsoft Azure, Google, Tencent and Alibaba. Google announced it chose AMD EPYC processors to exclusively power the first offering in its new Tau VM family. In enterprise, we see demand accelerating as more than 100 third gen EPYC processor platforms are now in production from HP, Lenovo, Supermicro, Cisco and others.
Computing and graphics revenue was $2.25 billion, up 65% from a year ago. PC processor average selling price was up due to Ryzen desktop and notebook chips. GPU average selling prices also grew. Enterprise, embedded and semi-custom unit revenue was $1.6 billion, up 183% from a year ago. EPYC processor demand drove sales. AMD ended the third quarter with cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments of $3.79 billion.