AMD's sales of mining GPUs are now negligible, shares tumble 25%

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AMD released its Q3 earnings yesterday, which sent its stock price down by 25% in after-hours trading. The reported revenues were below analysts' estimates mainly because of the decreasing demand for GPUs. In its financial report, AMD says that "blockchain-related GPU sales in the third quarter were negligible" compared to "approximately high single digit percentage of total AMD revenue" in Q3 of 2017. In Q4 of 2017, blockchain-related GPU sales were "approximately low double-digit"percentage of total AMD revenue. Kinngai Chan, Summit Insights Group analyst, told Reuters that "AMD had too high an exposure to the crypto-currency market."

AMD isn't the only chip producer feeling the cryptocurrency crash. Nvidia announced their Q2 results in August and also missed the estimates. Revenues from Nvidia's miners were $289 million in Q1, which was about 10% of total revenues. The forecast for revenues coming from miners was $100 million but actually ended up being mere $18 million. Nvidia's CFO Colette Kress told WSJ: "Whereas we had previously anticipated cryptocurrency to be meaningful for the year, we are now projecting no contributions going forward."

AUTHOR

Larry joined crypto research full time in early 2017 and has expertise in capital markets, market structure and early stage DeFi companies/protocols and token economics. He has a background in economics and finance.

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