AMD on Tuesday said it had amended its wafer supply agreement with GlobalFoundries. Under the terms of the new deal, the two companies agreed about prices and volumes of wafers that AMD will purchase from the U.S.-based foundry through at least 2021. The seventh such wafer amendment between the two parties, it marks the latest shift in how the two companies do business with each other amidst changing business strategies on both sides. However it also won't be the last; while the latest amendment sets purchase targets through 2021, the overall WSA itself will still run through March 1, 2024.

The big news with the latest WSA update is that it allows AMD to contract any foundry to produce chips at 7 nm and thinner nodes without any one-time payments or royalties to GlobalFoundries. GlonbalFoundries, of course, announced last year that they were getting out of the race for cutting-edge manufacturing nodes, including 7nm, potentially putting AMD in a long-term bind as their high-end products require competitive manufacturing processes. As a result there has been a big question in how AMD and GlobalFoundries would resolve this dispute, and the latest WSA revision finally supplies the answer.

The net result is that as of this moment, AMD has slated all of their currently-announced leading-edge 7nm CPUs and GPUs to use TSMC's 7nm process, and AMD is further free to tap Samsung as well if they desire. Past that, the latest WSA update will see AMD continue to rely heavily on GlobalFoundries for any larger nodes, as the firm will remain AMD’s long-term strategic supplier for 12nm and above. The new agreement sets purchase commitments by AMD and prices by GlobalFoundries through 2021.

One of the important aspects of the new agreement is that if AMD fails to meet the annual wafer purchase target for 2019, 2020, and 2021, it will have to pay GlobalFoundries “a portion of the difference” between the actual wafer purchases and the planned target for that year. While this is not exactly a take-or-pay agreement that AMD used to have with GlobalFoundries several years ago, it will still have to use/sell 12LP and 14LPP chips in high volumes in a bid not to pay charges to its partner. That said, since AMD does not disclose what the required wafer volumes are, it is unclear how they will affect the company’s product mix in the coming years.

At present AMD sells numerous products fabricated by GlobalFoundries using its 12LP and 14LPP manufacturing technologies. And over the next several years, the company will have to supply numerous customers with these products for embedded and commercial applications (e.g, Ryzen Pro, Ryzen embedded, and EPYC processors), not to mention the 14nm-based I/O die to be used in AMD's next-gen server and desktop processors. So even though AMD's cutting-edge parts are starting to transition to 7nm, AMD will still have plenty of demand for 12nm+ manufacturing, and will continue to need GlobalFoundries going forward.

Meanwhile, it's worth noting that while the latest WSA amendment lays out detailed volume and pricing plans through 2021, AMD's overall agreement with GlobalFoundries still runs through 2024. So in the next couple of years, AMD and GlobalFoundries will still need to decide how the fab will supply AMD over the final years of the agreement. Which will make for an intriguing situation to say the least given GlobalFoundries' recent change in direction. At a high level it's easy enough to see how AMD could utilize 12nm+ capacity through 2021, but AMD's needs for such a large node (or GlobalFoundries' other specialized nodes) in the 2022-2024 timeframe are not nearly as obvious.

The statement by AMD reads as follows:

“Today AMD announced it entered into a seventh amendment to its wafer supply agreement with GLOBALFOUNDRIES Inc. (GF). GF continues to be a long-term strategic partner to AMD for the 12nm node and above and the amendment establishes purchase commitments and pricing at 12nm and above for the years 2019 through 2021. The amendment provides AMD full flexibility for wafer purchases from any foundry at the 7nm node and beyond without any one-time payments or royalties.”

GlobalFoundries said the following:

“AMD remains an important strategic partner as we reshape our portfolio to intensify investment in the technologies that provide the most value to customers. We are proud to be a critical supplier of AMD’s current-generation 14nm and 12nm products, and we look forward to continuing to play a key role in their next-generation products.”

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Source: AMD

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  • johnNDenver - Wednesday, January 30, 2019 - link

    I thought I read somewhere about AMD getting back into the chipset business. This could be another thing that they put off on GF.
  • deksman2 - Thursday, January 31, 2019 - link

    Possibly. At the moment there is limited information at best, so I'm just relaying what I know to date.
    :-)
  • eva02langley - Wednesday, January 30, 2019 - link

    I am seeing potential console silicon on 12nm.

    Honestly, if they can just make IO die out of this deal, that would be awesome.

    AMD needs to find an exit door from that contract.
  • deksman2 - Wednesday, January 30, 2019 - link

    Nah... the chiplets and most of the hardware for Zen 2 and Zen 3 will be done by TSMC (Zen 3 might use other fabs, but we're not there yet, so we don't know).
    Only the Interconnect will be done on 14nm for Zen 2, along with the 3xxx series 12nm AMD mobile products (Ryzen+ APU's) this year.
    Next year, we are likely only going to see the Interconnect for Zen 3 from GF... but other than that, I don't think AMD will be ordering anything else from GF.

    Its a bit of a letdown that GF have locked AMD into making them buy stuff from them until 2021, but its a price for a complete break (and good riddance too)... but I'm hoping this won't hamper things too much for AMD (or at all).
    I do think the I/O can be scaled down to 7nm (contrary to what Lisa Su said - I think she may have said it originally because she was being diplomatic and hid the premise that one of the stipulations from moving away from GF was that they continue purchasing stuff from them for a certain time).
    Now that the royalty fees have been eliminated... its possible this stipulation for using GF until 2021 was part of the deal.
    Its better than AMD having to stay with GF.
  • johnNDenver - Wednesday, January 30, 2019 - link

    I think what Lisa Su said was there was no need to move the I/O to 7nm not that it couldn't be.
    I thought I read somewhere about AMD getting back into the chipset business. This could be another thing that they put off on GF.

    Hopefully the Zen2 line will be so successful that they will need all of GF capacity just to make the I/O chiplet.
  • eastcoast_pete - Thursday, January 31, 2019 - link

    Question: Is GloFo actively developing/optimizing it's 14 and 12 nm tech for lower power consumption, or have those efforts been put on hold also? Not to say that what Intel did with tinkering with its 14 nm FinFet tech (while running into a wall at 10 nm) is all great, but they did manage to improve the performance/power at least somewhat. So, how much air is left in GloFo's 14 and 12 nm process?
  • zamroni - Thursday, January 31, 2019 - link

    Amd should ditch global foundry. Gf is AMD's Achilles heel

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