Wednesday, April 11, 2007

April 11 - Avoiding Anti-Trust

I need to begin this post by saying that I technically love AMD microprocessors. I also like AMD as a company and all of the individuals who I have met who work there. At my last CPU upgrade, I built an AMD Athlon64 system and have never been happier with my PC. With all that said, I still need to be clear that I intend absolutely none of the following to be hurtful.

AMD recently announced some fiscal bad news. According to the press release, AMD is facing greater than anticipated competitive pressure and that has led them to lower performance expectations. I doubt this will last too long. In fact, the faster they lose market share, the more quickly they will be back in the black. Huh?

AMD sets the market's pace. No, really. Intel does not. It makes no sense for Intel to determine what the market will be. And, Intel depends on the existence of AMD more than any other company in the world. By set the market's pace, what I mean is determine what the specifications (performance and features) of the current crop of microprocessors will be.

This does not mean that AMD has, is or will always be measurably better than Intel, it just means that Intel is willing to let them be if it servers their interest.

So how can a short, sharp period of financial pain help AMD return to profitability? Why does Intel care if AMD exists? Why would Intel, a company 15 times larger than AMD permit AMD to set the pace for development? The answers to these questions are rooted in Intel's greatest fear, Anti-trust Laws. Intel very carefully maintains it's near-monopoly position and it's ability to use anti-competitive monopolistic tactics so long as AMD exists.

So, here is what (I'm guessing) Intel does. They decide what constitutes an acceptable portion of the market for AMD to have. As long as AMD has less than that share, Intel appears to rest on it's laurels (in reality they are developing many technologies for later use). They milk their existing line for as long as they can, extracting the most profit they can because they don't need to to maintain their market share. When AMD achieves a share of the market greater than Intel can stomach, Intel brings it's huge capitalization to bear on the problem of setting it to right by rapidly developing and releasing just enough new technology to acieve technical superiority over AMD. This, in turn, drives the market to buy more Intel chips and before too long everything is right again in Intel's eyes.

If Intel got too good, AMD would die. If Intel rested too long, AMD would have a chance at achieving sufficient market share to not survive at Intel's pleasure. I think this almost happened recently as Hell froze over not too long ago when Dell started buying AMD processors.

So, how can AMD minimize their pain when Intel fights back? It seems to me that if they start fighting right away, they will have large expenditures with a slowly decreasing market share because Intel will not let up until things are in what they perceive to be balance. On the other hand, if they can manage a very quick downturn, then they conserve their capital and perhaps come to market with dramatic new technology that finally pushes their financial fortunes fast enough to become an equal competitor to Intel.

Because that is what will have to happen for this situation to change. AMD will have to develop microprocessor technology so good and with a sufficient roadmap that they can carry their fortune all the way to 40-50% market share and a much larger market cap. They very nearly achieved this with the introduction of their 64 bit processors. It cost Intel greatly to reverse their 64 bit plans and follow AMD's lead and they were slow to do it because they had to work through many issues associated with, effectively, abandoning it's huge investment in Itanium.

AMD will know it has been successful when Intel tries to destroy them. Until then, Intel will be the company that cares the most about AMD's survival, aside from AMD itself.

5 comments:

YourHumbleHost said...

Why would you say conspiracy theory? The market is not the semiconductor market but, rather, the microprocessor market. Intel has already had a brush with anti-trust laws once and would not want to do so again.

A conspiracy theory requires a leap of irrational thought. What is so irrational about trying to milk every ounce of profit out of a product line instead of abandoning it by introducing new product that is better than your existing product which is already better than your competitors.

Intel and AMD have swapped places several times in the features/performance race. Each time, it has been when AMD captured a certain portion of the available microprocessor market. To me, this appears to be a trigger that causes a behavioral change at Intel. That change seems to disappear when AMD's market share falls, but never to an insubstantial portion of the market. To me this looks like Intel manipulating the competition for the reasons I posted.

And then there is the question of, conspiring with whom? I am certainly not saying that AMD is a party to this strategy. What I do suggest is that doing the analysis to determine where Intel's pain stops and getting there as quickly as possible would conserve most of their capital, potentially hastening their recovery.

I freely admit this would be a very risky move on their part.

joeyblades said...

First, I think you're giving Intel too much credit. Those sorts of machinations sound much more plausible in blog theory than they are a practical reality...

Second, it's not their business strategy that gives Intel a near monopoly, it's the Microsoft operating systems. If AMD were to suddenly fold, I don't think Intel would be at risk of anti-trust.

Just because you're big and you're the only one doesn't constitute anti-trust. A company has to demonstrate monopolistic practices and it has to be deemed in the best interest of society to force an anti-trust split.

If AMD folded, breaking up Intel would not be in the best interest of society...

Intel is not Standard Oil or Microsoft. Therefore I don't think they have anything to worry about, nor do I think they are worried about keeping AMD afloat.

YourHumbleHost said...

Intel is not at risk for Anti-trust... Really? Really?? (historical)REALLY???

I'm not giving Intel all that much credit. It is really a matter of very few good decisions and a 15 to 1 advantage in resources.

joeyblades said...

Speaking of anti-trust...

http://apcmag.com/5835/vendors_in_no_rush_to_ditch_xp_for_vista

joeyblades said...

Finally got around to reading AMD's official "Full Complaint"... Sheesh, what a bunch of whiners...

I can certainly see that AMD perceives the playing field to not be level, but all of the things AMD is complaining about seem silly. It all boils down to one fundamental concept, Intel generated supreme brand awareness to the point where consumers, in general, would prefer Intel over any other manufacturer. True there is a certain level of compatibility concerns that drive this, however Microsoft has more to do with this than Intel.

I don't see any evidence that Intel engaged in "egregious" anti-trust behaviors. Any discounting seems perfectly in line with acceptable business practices. AMD finds fault with the "Intel Inside" branding, however, truth be told, if AMD offered comparable discounts for placement of "Powered by AMD" stickers, the OEMs would not see the benefit because their customers WANT to see "Intel Inside".

Don't blame Intel for doing a good job of marketing - blame consumers for eating it all up!