Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit login

I bought at $5 and sold at 15 thinking I was so clever.

Then I bought at 80 and held through 160, now it's at 96.

I'm a long term bull on AMD, but I think the rocket left the atmosphere already. To me it's a blue chip. Intel nor AMD will ever go out of business, unless and until x86 itself dies and neither can pivot. AMD has a lock on consoles, it is the only competitor to Intel in x86, it basically can't go out of business.




With increasing ARM both on servers and laptops(Macs) x86 itself may wane in marketshare .


> With increasing ARM both on servers and laptops(Macs) x86 itself may wane in marketshare .

Not a problem - they both (Intel and AMD) make ARM chips too, don't they?


Cloud vendors have been increasingly pushing their own chips. It's hard to see AMD having any pricing power in the long run, unless their chips are significantly better than what big tech can create on their own


The Gigacorps have done this, some of them. I have more interest in the ARM argument than in the "custom chip" argument, unless Amazon and co. decide to retail their processors.

Consoles, most OEMs, and all non-gigacorps will be buying off-the-shelf processors.


I'm pretty sure cloud and enterprise sales make up the bulk of their revenue and growth. Not consumer.

That being said there's likely still a few years of runway left for their growth. Even if cloud vendors don't push their own chips aggressively, they can use it as leverage to cut into AMD margins.

I don't see how ARM is an argument. AMD will easily be able to create competitive arm processors, there just wasn't a strong financial incentive to do it before




Join us for AI Startup School this June 16-17 in San Francisco!

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: