I don't remember the specifics, but IIRC it is high interest (rate) debt & secondly why would AMD need VC funding like Uber did when they were a unicorn? Unless you're talking about some recent debt Uber has taken on.
They're still investing, heavily across verticals though you should also know that investing in R&D has its real limits. Beyond a certain point investing more will not yield any tangible benefits, in fact it will be counter productive. If investing in R&D was the panacea, as some say, then Intel or IBM would still be the leaders in their dominant fields.
I don't expect that either, but 2x the wafer orders for 7nm TSMC should count for something right?
I'm using the VC funding just as an example. I'm not saying AMD is getting VC investors, I'm saying that investors dont care about debt as long as a company is innovating in the pursuit of larger future profits, and that is why AMD reducing its debt load is not raising share price.
R+D has its limits, sure, but based on the storry state of RTG hardware and drivers (freesync STILL broken on navi 7 months later) and the far larger support group, from integration to customer support that intel boasts, AMD has plenty of areas that need more investment. Investors see that, again just an explanation of why investors were not buying up shares when the quarterly report came out.
As for intel/IBM, well, intel is putting mor einto share buyback instead of R+D, and look where it got them, and where they are going. Despite that, they are still HUGE compared to AMD, both in market share and revenue. IBM is a sad tale, but a great example of a dominant player falling asleep at the wheel.
2x the wafer orders will help, but that wont happen until Apple drops 7nm usage. Even then, it takes months for those chips being fabed to reach manufacturers and retailers, and wiht the chinese new year being extended by 2 weeks amid the croronavirus outbreak, it will take time before this strategy pays off any dividends, and that assumes the demand is there. We havent heard of EPYC shortages like we have Xeon shortages from intel.
AMD is on a slow boil, which is good, AMD is positioned to do quite well, but investors want it to get huge quick so they can make a profit and dump the shares. AMD isnt playing that game, hence why share prices went down instead of up.