SAN FRANCISCO—Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (AMD) said Thursday (Oct. 15) it sold a majority stake in its test, assembly and packaging facilities in Asia as part of a joint venture with China’s Nantong Fujitsu Microelectronics Co. Ltd. (NFME).
The deal will provide AMD (Sunnyvale, Calif.) with an infusion of about $320 million as the company struggles the right the ship after reporting another quarterly loss that included a $65 million inventory write-down for older accelerated processing units (APUs). AMD also indicated it would look to drive revenue growth from more aggressive licensing of its technology going forward.
AMD will retain a 15% ownership in its test and assembly facilities in Penang, Malaysia and Suzhou, China. The 1,700 AMD employees at those facilities will be transferred to the joint venture.
The deal is consistent with AMD’s strategy to “focus the company on improving our long term financial performance by building great products and simplifying our business model,” said Lisa Su, AMD’s president and CEO, in a conference call with analysts.
“Forming a back-end manufacturing joint venture is a significant step toward achieving these goals, as we align our operating model with other fabless companies and strengthen our balance sheet,” Su said.
The third quarter marked AMD’s fourth straight quarterly loss. Earlier this month, AMD announced plans to cut 5% of its global workforce.
AMD has struggled in recent years amid a declining PC sales. As consumers have increasingly embraced mobile computing platforms such as tablets and smartphones, the dominance of x86 processors sold by AMD and Intel has decreased, opening the door for other types of processors based on the ARM architecture and others. In the first half of 2015, AMD slipped from the ranking of the 20 top chip suppliers compiled by IC Insights Inc.
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