weskurtz81 :
Jaguar,
The Dow isn't really the best indication of the stock market in general. AMD is indeed getting hit, but the market is in major turmoil right now. You need to look at what the market has been doing since August to really see what has been going on.
That aside, AMD has been hit harder, but I don't think it's just because of delays, I think alot of people are scared of stock dilution, and debt to equity ratio. Then tack on the errata that AMD ordered to stop ship on Phenoms (which came out after that thread was started) and AMD stock is sliding.
So much more stuff was going on with AMD other than the delays, that I think it was really a combination of many things, and not just one thing.
The Dow isn't really the best indication of the stock market in general. AMD is indeed getting hit, but the market is in major turmoil right now. You need to look at what the market has been doing since August to really see what has been going on.
That aside, AMD has been hit harder, but I don't think it's just because of delays, I think alot of people are scared of stock dilution, and debt to equity ratio. Then tack on the errata that AMD ordered to stop ship on Phenoms (which came out after that thread was started) and AMD stock is sliding.
So much more stuff was going on with AMD other than the delays, that I think it was really a combination of many things, and not just one thing.
The market is in major turmoil right now because of the sub-prime problem and all of defaults on mortgage backed securities, which I think is having little effect on AMD. Industrial, Consumer Staples, and most other sectors are rebounding after the Federal interest rate cut. If you really want to use a index that actually has some meaning I would direct you to the S&P as it is considered to be the bellwether by investors. You could just use a ETF like SPDR's (XLK). They typically offer a better view of a sector especially if you want to benchmark a company to its competitors. I am not sure what you mean by stock dilution. They were able to acquire ATI without having to issue extra equity (common stock). Why would they do that now seeing as that is the very last way a corporation would want to raise money? And I think that after a major acquisition like ATI there would be a high D/E ratio. You have to ask though... what is the D/E to the sector and what is it to its competitors. A D/E ratio is useless unless you have historical values to compare it to. AMD had to take on more debt for their acquisition because they use most of their retained earnings (cash and cash equivalents) from previous years to finance research and development. In 2006 they spent over $1.2 billion in R&D expense.
In case anyone was wondering I got most of my values from their 2006 10-K which does not reflect their true financial health as of this date. I could have looked through their 10-Qs for the past three quarters, but I am at work and my lunch break is almost over so I used the quarterly data provided by yahoo.com
Here are two links to the AMD’s SEC filings if you guys want to explore their financials on your own
http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/financials/secfilings.asp?symbol=AMD
and
http://annualreport.amd.com/