Advanced Micro Devices Inc
Excluding IoT and semi-custom products such as game console chips that AMD manufactures, Venture Beat cites Mercury Research.
The company again recorded gains in both client and server segments quarterly and yearly.
Dean McCarron of Mercury Research noted that x86 processor shipments aligned with typical seasonal trends in the first quarter, ending March 31, with all segments seeing moderate declines, which is typical for this time of year.
This past quarter marked the first normal market results across desktop, mobile, and server segments since early 2020 when the COVID pandemic began. However, IoT/SoC processor shipments fell significantly due to decreased console demand, impacting AMD's SoC shipments. AMD reported a 48% drop in gaming revenue in the first quarter compared to the previous year and anticipated further declines throughout 2024.
McCarron explained that the statistics and share movements from the past few quarters better reflect how suppliers managed their inventory corrections. Most comparisons should be valid by the third quarter of 2024, although the year-on-year results are not.
For the all-inclusive share, which includes PC client CPUs, servers, IoT, and semi-custom products like gaming consoles, Intel gained 2.4 percentage points over the quarter, driven by AMD's reduced SoC business.
Analysts flagged AMD's significant gains in the server CPU market and its successful market share capture in the merchant accelerator sector with the Mi300 series, making it a formidable competitor to Nvidia Corp
Meanwhile, after Arm Holdings Plc's
AMD stock gained over 57% in the last 12 months. Investors can gain exposure to the stock via AOT Growth And Innovation ETF
Price Actions: AMD shares traded higher by 0.79% at $153.58 premarket at the last check Friday.