In a research bulletin, Merrill Lynch's Joe Osha predicts AMD will sell 1 million fewer chips in the second quarter compared with the first, down to 6.3 million units. As a result, Osha says, AMD will likely post per-share second-quarter earnings of only 22 cents, five cents below the consensus estimate of 27 cents. Last year, AMD reported second-quarter earnings of $1.21 on record revenue of $1.17 billion. Earlier this month, AMD president and chief operating officer Hector Ruiz said he expects the company to post modest revenue growth this year. AMD is expected to report second-quarter earnings on July 12.
Lehman Brothers analyst Dan Niles reduced his estimate for AMD's second-quarter earnings to 24 cents from 28 cents and his full-year 2001 earnings estimate for Intel from 55 cents to 51 cents due to "a brutal processing pricing environment." Niles says that, amidst a PC price war, average selling prices for chips have fallen 3% to 5% since the first quarter. AMD's slump also makes Osha leery about Intel's chances for a second-quarter uptick in unit shipments, he says, despite statements to that effect made by company executives two weeks ago during a midquarter update. "We have difficulty reconciling that with a down AMD quarter," Osha says. Intel is expected to post per-share earnings of 11 cents for the second quarter and 54 cents for the year, according to consensus estimates. Intel is scheduled to report second quarter results on July 17.
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