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Weighing AMD's Replacement Financing Pact (AMD, INTC, NVDA)
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After looking at a new financing pact at Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (NYSE:AMD) the first reaction here was "these bankers really are using voodoo financing like we said back in April," but even if that is the case today’s note pricing actually looks like much less like voodoo for the buyer and seller on the surface. It’s never easy to defend a bad situation, but when you see companies that are in trouble doing "less bad than before" the market usually reacts favorably. Shares are down today with a weak market while NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) shares are up ahead of earnings, but this really doesn’t look that bad considering how we perceive the AMD situation right now.
Let’s compare today’s pricing to the prior voodoo financing:
This new financing looks like it has gotten the rest of that old term loan of $2.5 Billion from Morgan Stanley Senior Funding (for the ATI acquisition) paid off, out of the way, and out of the creditor order. The new financing is also a 144A private placement, so it is unknown who bought it and it is still not going into the hands of the public. This isn’t without any debt covenants and doesn’t have a get out jail free card attached, but it cleans up that old financing and the terms seem better when you compare the financial markets of today to the financial markets in April.
AMD’s shares actually rose into the last voodoo deal we talked about in April, but then had a couple of rough weeks before recovering again. The last few weeks have been hard on the stock with shares trading briefly over $16.00 toward the end of July and shares around $13.00 today. Predicting the pattern from here has too many variables and would be guesswork. This will save in interest expense depending on the timing and interpretation of exit terms. That is very subjective and very much on the surface, so don’t etch it into stone. This deal also looks more fair to the actual note buyers with better convertible price terms.
If AMD can focus more on some of the current offerings now and do more outsourcing to focus on design and R&D, then we might think a bit better of the company. It would also be able to unload some of its factory land, assuming there is a buyer in the current liquidity crunch. That entire scenario is still an IF and we do not really expect that in the near-term based on certain recent factory investments committed. AMD is still at a crossroads right now where it still needs to decide on its core processors whether it wants to fight the biggest bad boy on the block named Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) or if it wants to accept a less dominant position that has more assured survival.
Until we’ve gotten to weigh today’s environment more and see what some of the covenants and provisions in later filings are for sure, we aren’t going to give this a true thumbs up or thumbs down verdict.
Jon C. Ogg
August 9, 2007
Jon Ogg can be reached at [email protected]; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.
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