Lisa Su
Chair and Chief Executive Officer at Advanced Micro Devices
Thank you, Mitch, and good afternoon to all those listening in today. We executed well in the third quarter, delivering strong top-line and bottom-line growth, achieving multiple milestones on our AI hardware and software roadmaps and significantly accelerating our momentum with customers for our AI solutions.
In PCs, there are now more than 50 notebook designs powered by Ryzen AI in market and we are working closely with Microsoft on the next generation of Windows that will take advantage of our on-chip AI engine to enable the biggest advances in the Windows user experience in more than 20 years.
In the Data Center, multiple large hyperscale customers committed to deploy Instinct MI300 accelerators supported by our latest ROCm software suite and the growing adoption of an open hardware-agnostic software ecosystem.
Looking at the third quarter financial results. Revenue grew 4% year over year and 8% sequentially to $5.8 billion, driven by record server CPU revenue and strong rise in processor sales.
Turning to the segment results. Data Center segment revenue of $1.6 billion was flat year over year and up 21% sequentially, as solid demand for both 3rd and 4th Gen EPYC processor families resulted in record quarterly server processor revenue. We gained server CPU revenue share in the quarter as 4th Gen EPYC CPU revenue grew more than 50% sequentially, crossing over to represent a majority of our server processor revenue and unit shipments.
In Cloud, while the demand environment remained mixed in the quarter, EPYC CPU revenue grew by a strong double-digit percentage sequentially as hyperscalers expanded deployments of EPYC processors to power their internal workloads and public instances while optimizing their infrastructure spend. Nearly 100 new AMD-powered cloud instances launched in the quarter from Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Oracle, Tencent and others, including multiple Genoa instances that deliver leadership performance for general purpose, HPC, bare metal and memory optimized workloads.
In Enterprise, while overall demand remains soft, we are seeing strong indications that the significant performance and TCO advantages of Genoa and our expanded go-to-market investments are paying off as enterprise revenue grew by a double-digit percentage sequentially. We closed multiple new wins with leading automotive, aerospace, financial services, pharmaceutical and technology customers, and the number of enterprise customers actively testing EPYC platforms on-prem increased significantly quarter on quarter.
We also expanded our 4th Gen EPYC processor portfolio with the launch of our Siena processors that deliver leadership energy efficiency and performance for intelligent edge and teleco applications. Dell, Lenovo, Supermicro and others launched new platforms that expand our EPYC CPU TAM to address telco, retail and manufacturing applications. With the launch of Siena, we now offer the industry's most performant and most energy-efficient portfolio of server processors across cloud, enterprise, technical, HPC and edge computing.
I am very pleased with the momentum we have built for our EPYC CPU portfolio. We are building on this momentum with our next-gen Turin server processors based on our new Zen 5 core that delivers significant performance and efficiency gains. Turin is in the labs of our top customers and partners now and customer feedback has been very strong and we are on track to launch in 2024.
Looking at our broader data center portfolio. We made significant progress in our Data Center GPU business in the third quarter, as the multi-year investments we have made in our hardware and software roadmaps resulted in significant customer traction for our next-generation Instinct MI300 accelerators, in particularly our Instinct MI300X GPU that delivers leadership inferencing and training performance.
On the hardware side, bring-up and validation of our MI300A and MI300X accelerators continued progressing to plan with performance now meeting or exceeding our expectations. Production shipments of Instinct MI300A APUs started earlier this month to support the El Capitan exascale supercomputer, and we are on track to begin production shipments of Instinct MI300X GPU accelerators to lead cloud and OEM customers in the coming weeks.
On the software side, we further expanded our AI software ecosystem and made great progress enhancing the performance and features of our ROCm software in the quarter. In addition to ROCm being fully integrated into the mainline PyTorch and TensorFlow ecosystems, Hugging Face models are now regularly updated and validated to run on Instinct accelerators and other supported AMD AI hardware.
AI startup Lamini announced they achieved software parity with CUDA for LLMs running on Instinct MI250 GPUs, enabling enterprise customers to easily deploy production-ready LLMs, fine-tuned for their specific data on Instinct MI250 GPUs with minimal code changes.
We also strengthened our AI software capabilities with the strategic acquisitions of Mipsology and Nod.ai. Mipsology is a long-standing partner with proven expertise delivering AI software and solutions running on top of our adaptive SoCs for data center, edge and embedded markets. Nod.ai adds a highly experienced team with a track record of substantial contributions to open-source AI compilers and industry-leading software already used by many of the largest cloud, enterprise and AI companies. Nod's compiler-based automation software can significantly accelerate the deployment of highly-performant AI models optimized for our Instinct, Ryzen, EPYC, Versal and Radeon processors.
Based on the rapid progress we are making with our AI roadmap execution and purchase commitments from cloud customers, we now expect Data Center GPU revenue to be approximately $400 million in the fourth quarter and exceed $2 billion in 2024 as revenue ramps throughout the year. This growth would make MI300 the fastest product to ramp to $1 billion in sales in AMD history. I look forward to sharing more details on our progress at our December AI event.
Turning to our Client segment. Revenue increased 42% year over year and 46% sequentially to $1.5 billion. Sales of our Ryzen 7000 processors, featuring our industry-leading Ryzen AI on-ship accelerator, grew significantly in the quarter as inventory levels in the PC market normalized and demand began returning to seasonal patterns. Revenue for our latest generation client CPUs powered by our Zen 4 core more than doubled sequentially as we saw strong demand for our Ryzen 7000 series notebook and desktop processors that deliver both leadership energy efficiency and performance across a wide range of workloads.
In commercial, we launched our first Threadripper PRO workstation CPUs based on our Zen 4 core that deliver unmatched performance for multi-threaded professional design, rendering and simulation applications. Dell, HPE and Lenovo announced an expanded set of workstations powered by new Threadripper PRO processors as we focus on growing this margin-accretive portion of our client business. Looking forward, we are executing on a multi-year Ryzen AI roadmap to deliver leadership compute capabilities built on top of Microsoft's Windows software ecosystem to enable the new generation of AI PCs that will fundamentally redefine the computing experience over the coming years.
Now, turning to our Gaming segment. Revenue declined 8% year over year and 5% sequentially to $1.5 billion, as lower semi-custom revenue was partially offset by increased sales of Radeon GPUs. Although semi-custom SoC sales declined in line with our projections for this point in the console cycle, overall revenue for this console generation continues tracking significantly higher than the prior generation based on strong demand for Microsoft and Sony consoles.
In gaming graphics, revenue grew both year over year and sequentially driven by increased demand in the channel. We expanded our Radeon 7000 series with the launch of new RX 7000 series enthusiast desktop GPUs that offer leadership price performance for 1440P gamers.
Turning to our Embedded segment. As we expected, revenue decreased 5% year over year to $1.2 billion. Sequentially, revenue declined 15% as lead times normalized and customers focused on reducing inventory levels. We expanded our leadership Versal SoC portfolio in the quarter with the launches of our first adaptive SoCs with on-chip HBM memory that deliver significant performance and efficiency for memory-bound data center, network, test and aerospace applications.
We also announced our next-generation, space-grade Versal SoC that integrates an enhanced AI engine and is the industry's only solution that supports unlimited reprogramming during development and after deployment. For the fintech market, we launched our latest Alveo accelerator card that delivers a 7 times improvement in latency compared to our prior generation and has already been deployed by multiple trading firms in their ultra-low latency training platforms.
Since closing our acquisition of Xilinx a little over 1.5 years ago, our Embedded business has grown significantly driven by our leadership products. Looking ahead, based on our current visibility, we expect Embedded segment revenue to decline sequentially as customers continue working through elevated inventory levels through the first half of 2024.
Over the medium term, we see strong growth opportunities for Embedded business based on our significant design win traction and our broad and differentiated portfolio of embedded FPGAs, CPUs, GPUs and Adaptive SoCs that can address a larger portion of our customers' compute needs.
In summary, I'm pleased with our third quarter financial results driven by the significant acceleration of Zen 4 server and client processor sales. Looking at the next couple of quarters, we expect strong growth in our Data Center business driven by both EOYC and Instinct processors. This growth will be partially offset by softening demand in our Embedded business and lower semicustom revenue given where we are in the console cycle.
As the PC market returns to seasonal patterns, we believe we are well positioned to gain profitable share in the premium and commercial portions of the market based on the strength of our product offerings. We are focused on accelerating our leadership AI capabilities across our entire product portfolio, executing on our hardware and software roadmaps, and expanding our enterprise computing footprint. I look forward to sharing more details on our AI progress in a few weeks at our Together We Advance AI event.
Now, I'd like to turn the call over to Jean to provide additional color on our third quarter results and our outlook for Q4. Jean?