Overview
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) — the perennial #2 chip maker that challenged Intel's x86 monopoly and captured GPU market share from NVIDIA.
When to Load This Skill
- User asks about AMD history, CPU architecture, or semiconductor competition
- Need analysis of x86 duopoly, Lisa Su's turnaround, or AI chip alternatives to NVIDIA
- Questions about AMD's EPYC server chips or Radeon GPU strategy
Historical Timeline
- 1969: Jerry Sanders and seven Fairchild colleagues found AMD in Sunnyvale, California
- 1975: AMD enters the microprocessor market with AM9080 (Intel 8080 clone)
- 1982: Signs cross-licensing agreement with Intel — becomes second-source for x86 chips
- 1999: Athlon processor — first x86 CPU to reach 1GHz, beating Intel to the milestone
- 2003: Introduces x86-64 architecture — extends 32-bit x86 to 64-bit, adopted by Intel
- 2006: Acquires ATI Technologies for $5.4B — gains GPU capabilities
- 2014-2017: Near-bankruptcy; stock falls to $1.60; Lisa Su appointed CEO
- 2017: Ryzen launch — Zen architecture delivers 52% IPC improvement
- 2022: Acquires Xilinx for $49B — largest semiconductor acquisition ever
- 2024: MI300X AI accelerators challenge NVIDIA; ~$25B revenue
Business Model
Designs CPUs (Ryzen, EPYC) and GPUs (Radeon, Instinct) — a 'fabless' model outsourcing manufacturing to TSMC. Revenue split: Data Center (~40%), Client (~25%), Gaming (~20%), Embedded (~15%). The Xilinx acquisition adds adaptive computing (FPGAs) for aerospace, automotive, and telecom.
Competitive Moat
- x86 duopoly with Intel — only two companies licensed to make x86-compatible CPUs
- Chiplet architecture: Zen design allows mixing manufacturing processes for cost optimization
- EPYC server chips gaining enterprise share (AWS, Azure, Google Cloud)
- Xilinx FPGA portfolio: irreplaceable in defense, aerospace, and 5G infrastructure
- Lisa Su's engineering-first leadership culture — respected across semiconductor industry
Key Data
Revenue: ~$25B (2024) | Market cap: ~$200B+ | Employees: ~26,000 | Data Center CPU share: ~24% (growing) | Xilinx acquisition: $49B (2022)
Interesting Facts
- AMD's founder Jerry Sanders famously said 'Real men have fabs,' referring to their early decision to own manufacturing (later reversed to fabless)
- When Lisa Su became CEO in 2014, AMD was months from bankruptcy; she refocused on high-performance computing and the stock rose over 3,000% in five years