Shares in AMD took a hit and were about 6% lower in pre-market trading after the US chipmaker reported mixed quarterly earnings that missed Wall Street forecasts for adjusted earnings per share, but beat expectations on revenue.
For its fiscal second quarter, AMD posted net income of $872m, or 54 cents per share, up from $265m, or 16 cents per share, in the same period last year.
Revenue was $7.69bn, stronger than the $7.43bn expected, while adjusted earnings per share (EPS) sat at $0.48, compared with estimates of $0.49.
Looking ahead, the company guided for third-quarter revenue of $8.7bn, plus or minus $300m, slightly above consensus estimates of $8.3bn.
Chief executive Lisa Su cited geopolitical headwinds as a drag on its AI business, particularly in China where new US rules have curtailed sales of certain chips.
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“AI business revenue declined year over year as US export restrictions effectively eliminated MI308 sales to China, and we began transitioning to our next generation,” Su said on a call with analysts.
AMD saw an $800m impact from the Trump administration’s ban on the sale of the company’s MI308 AI chips for China.
AMD is the second-biggest maker of graphics processing units, or GPUs, for artificial intelligence behind Nvidia (NVDA).
Shares of Novo Nordisk, the Danish pharmaceutical giant behind Ozempic and Wegovy, fell in pre-market trading and on the Copenhagen Stock Exchange as the company’s outlook remains clouded by weaker-than-expected sales in the US amid increasing competition from copycat drugs.
In its second-quarter report, Novo Nordisk announced a 67% surge in revenues from its weight-loss drug Wegovy, reaching 19.53bn Danish kroner. While this represents strong growth, it fell slightly short of analysts' expectations, which had forecast 20bn Danish kroner, according to a poll by LSEG (LSEG.L).
Overall, the company’s sales rose 13% year-on-year, reaching 76.86bn Danish kroner (£8.96bn/$11.92bn) in the three months to June. This slightly exceeded the 76.6bn Danish kroner analysts had predicted. However, quarterly net profit came in at 26.5bn Danish kroner, just shy of the 26.6bn Danish kroner analysts had expected.
The company has faced competition from generic versions of its GLP-1 drugs, such as Wegovy for weight loss and Ozempic for diabetes. Despite US laws that prevent pharmacies from copying approved drugs, regulations around “compounding”, which allows for customised doses and formulations, have opened the door for competitors to enter the market.