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Meanwhile, high performance computing (HPC) and supercomputing have been big wins for AMD with El Capitan. The supercomputer at Lawerence Livermore National Laboratory has the recent distinction becoming the second AMD powered supercomputer to pass the exascale performance threshold and hitting #1 on the most recent Top500 supercomputer list.
What’s Going On With Intel?
In December 2024, CEO Pat Gelsinger was ousted amid dissatisfaction with the pace of his turnaround strategy. Interim co-CEOs David Zinsner and Michelle Johnston Holthaus have assumed leadership as the company searches for a permanent successor. This leadership instability has raised concerns about Intel’s strategic direction, particularly in its efforts to establish a contract chip manufacturing business.
In the third quarter of 2024, AMD surpssed Intel’s data center and AI group’s earnings of $3.3 billion in the same period.
In the AI chip market, Intel has struggled to keep pace with Nvidia. The company canceled plans for its Falcon Shores GPU accelerator and has seen weak demand for its Gaudi AI accelerator chip.
At the same time, AMD has seen significant success with its Instinct family of GPUs.
In the server CPU segment, Intel has delayed its efficiency-focused Clearwater Forest server CPU to 2026, while its 18A process is performing well. Further, Intel is preparing a high-core-count server CPU, Granite Rapids, slated for release in 2025, aiming to match AMD’s core counts for the first time since 2017.
Market analysts expect continued market share loses to AMD in PC and Server, where Intel formerly dominated, as reflected by the company’s 4% market share loss, and AMD picking up that market share.
While Intel is focusing on managing operating expenses and refocusing their efforts, having shed underperforming units over the last 18 months, Intel faces significant market challenges.
What Does the Future Hold for AMD?
AMD EVP, CFO and Treasurer Jean Hu was quoted as reflecting on the positive future for AMD, saying: