AMD shares fall more than 13% on weak outlook, dragging other chipmakers down
Lisa Su, president & chief executive officer at Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), is holding a 3rd generation Ryzen desktop CPU while she speaks during a keynote session at CES 2019 in Las Vegas on Jan. 9, 2019.
David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images
AMD shares were down 13.9% on Friday as investors digest the company's disappointing preliminary third-quarter results Thursday that were well below its initial guidance.
The chipmaker lowered its sales forecast for the third quarter on Thursday, blaming a larger than expected decline in personal computer sales and supply chain problems.
AMD now expects preliminary quarterly revenues of $5.6 billion, thanks to "reduced processing shipments". This is more than $1 billion less than the $6.7 billion AMD had previously predicted as its midpoint revenue expectation for the quarter.
The company also stated that its non-GAAP gross profit margin is expected to be around 50%, whereas it previously expected gross margin to reach closer to 54%.
Piper Sandler and Mizuho Securities, KeyBanc Capital Markets, KeyBanc Capital Markets, and Stifel all reduced their AMD price targets in notes to clients on Friday, but each firm maintained a buy rating or an overweight rating.
Other chipmakers, such as Intel or Nvidia, saw their shares drop by more than 5% and even 8% respectively. This could be due to weak PC demand and supply chain issues that could impact other semiconductor players.
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