News
        
        AMD Splits Operations in $7B Foreign Funding Deal
        
        
        
			- By Jim Barthold
- October 09, 2008
        What a difference a little money makes -- and it's nearly $7  billion in the case of New York-based chipmaker AMD (Advanced Micro Devices),  which unveiled a major investment and restructuring deal on Tuesday. 
AMD was on the financial ropes and facing heavy competition  in the cost-conscious semiconductor business when two Abu Dhabi companies, the Advanced Technology Investment  Company (ATIC) and Mubadala Development Company, stepped to the fore. The near  $7 billion deal will split the AMD chip-making operations into a separate  business, which is temporarily being called The Foundry Company. The Foundry Company  will be majority owned by ATIC and have AMD as its first and biggest customer.
  The deal breaks down like this. ATIC, which is a standalone,  separately capitalized investment company owned by the government of Abu Dhabi will own 55.6  percent of The Foundry Company with AMD controlling the remaining 44.4 percent.  AMD will contribute its manufacturing facilities in Dresden, Germany  and related assets and intellectual property to the deal and Mubadala will concurrently  increase its current investment in AMD to 19.3 percent.
Doug Grose, AMD's senior vice president of manufacturing  operations, explained in a released statement that the investment will enable The  Foundry Company to "deliver on our expansion plans by adding a second  leading-edge 300-millimeter facility with bulk silicon capabilities" in  Dresden, Germany.
In addition, the plan is to add more than 1,400 employees to  a "state-of-the-art manufacturing facility at the Luther Forest Technology  campus in upstate New York,"  he explained. Grose will become CEO of The Foundry Company.
The expansion plans suggest that AMD is ready to make silicon  waves that will rock the boat of its major competitor, Intel Corp. As part of  that effort, The Foundry Company is expanding its "highly successful  collaboration with IBM to bring in leading bulk silicon technology for  deployment in Dresden,"  according to Grose's statement.
New York   State, anxious for the new  jobs, is offering the company $1.2 billion in financial support. The state is  offering the funds despite a $2 billion budget shortfall, and despite majority  ownership by a foreign entity. The funding plan drew support from such  political luminaries as Sens. Hillary Clinton and Charles Schumer, both of whom  released statements reacting positively to the news. In addition to the 1,400  jobs The Foundry Company is promising, New York State  expects another 5,000 support jobs will be created in the region.
The deal means AMD is staying in the chips business while  avoiding manufacturing costs. 
AMD is "assured of access to leading edge manufacturing  processes without the capital expense requirements that come from owning a  world class manufacturing operation," explained Dirk Meyer, AMD's  president-CEO, in a prepared statement. He added that AMD "can now  intensify our focus on serving our customers as the only company capable of  delivering both world class CPU and graphics designs for next-generation computing  and digital media platforms."
Grose said he would "expect a small number of layoffs"  in AMD's noncore segments, such as consumer electronics. He added, "The  first order of business is about job creation in the interest of creating a new  company."    
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Jim Barthold is a freelance writer based in Delanco, N.J.   covering a variety of technology subjects.