Raevenlord
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On the back of impressive performance, yield, and cost metric for AMD's market-warping Ryzen and server-shaking EPYC processors, securities firm Rosenblatt Securities' Hans Mosesmann has affirmed a "Buy" rating for AMD's stock, while saddling Intel with a seldom-seen "Sell". All in all, there have been a number of changes in Intel's market ratings; there seems to be a downgrade trend towards either "Hold" or "Sell" scenarios compared to the usual "Buy" ratings given by hedge funds and financial analysts - ratings which are undoubtedly affected (at least in part) by AMD's Ryzen and EPYC execution.
Rosenblatt Securities' move stands mainly on two factors: AMD's EPYC single and dual-socket outlooks, with higher core-count and PCIe lanes in their single-socket offerings compared to Intel's dual-socket Xeon, with "half the area, big memory bandwidth and I/O advantages for EPYC." AMD's single-socket is expected to offer around 30% savings in total cost over a comparable Intel dual-socket platform. Mosesmann also mentions Ryzen's wins in die-area compared to Intel (with Ryzen being up to 10% smaller than Intel's platform. Additional news (well, more like rumors at this point, but analysts may have more information than we do) on Ryzen's yields beating expectations, at over 80% for fully-functional 8-core dies, also served to shake this recommendation. This speaks to AMD's current momentum in the high-performance x86 market. Hands and hats down to AMD, Jim Keller and his team, as well as to Lisa Su's leadership, for this momentous fight-back, clawing their way to relevance again.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site
Rosenblatt Securities' move stands mainly on two factors: AMD's EPYC single and dual-socket outlooks, with higher core-count and PCIe lanes in their single-socket offerings compared to Intel's dual-socket Xeon, with "half the area, big memory bandwidth and I/O advantages for EPYC." AMD's single-socket is expected to offer around 30% savings in total cost over a comparable Intel dual-socket platform. Mosesmann also mentions Ryzen's wins in die-area compared to Intel (with Ryzen being up to 10% smaller than Intel's platform. Additional news (well, more like rumors at this point, but analysts may have more information than we do) on Ryzen's yields beating expectations, at over 80% for fully-functional 8-core dies, also served to shake this recommendation. This speaks to AMD's current momentum in the high-performance x86 market. Hands and hats down to AMD, Jim Keller and his team, as well as to Lisa Su's leadership, for this momentous fight-back, clawing their way to relevance again.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site
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