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AMD India is committed to serve Indian market

AMD operations in India are central to every major product and design offering, says Vinay Sinha, Corporate Vice President, India Sales, AMD

AMD India is committed to serve Indian market
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AMD India is committed to serve Indian market

New Delhi AMD India is on an "exciting growth path", a senior executive of its India operations said, praising the engineering talent in the country and affirming the chipmaker's deep commitment to serving the market here.

Acknowledging the "invaluable contributions" of Indian engineers to its chipsets, Vinay Sinha, Corporate Vice President, India Sales, AMD said, "With Xilinx and Pensando, today India teams have an R&D footprint in every product across AMD's diversified portfolio". AMD operations in India are central to every major product and design offering, and the company expects that to continue, he added. India was quick to pick up AI, Sinha said of the new age technology that is quickly transitioning to a tool that can transform businesses fundamentally, and that can drive enormous disruption and increase in requisite investments.

The country is also key to developing AMD's data centre business focus. "AMD is deeply committed to serving the Indian market and is excited about the invaluable contributions of Indian engineers to our chipsets, which serve as the cornerstone of our enterprise," Sinha told. The chipmaker recognises the importance of its engineering talent as the backbone of the company and is focused on retaining and hiring the right talent for continued growth. "The growing demand for digital transformation has made data centre businesses a key focus for AMD, and having India as one of our leading markets is a testament to the progress being made. India is the second-largest market in APAC, and we expect over time, as the capacity builds, for India to even challenge bigger markets, as digitization and network proliferation continue," Sinha said.

India is building a "vibrant" semiconductor and displays ecosystem, supported by the government's Rs 76,000 crore semiconductor programme and the 'Make in India, For the World' initiative. AMD is keen to support the ecosystem in its entirety. "So, from a design perspective, our philosophy is not to look at India for cost arbitrage.

We would like to do end-to-end design in India. We've invested for many years and so at some point to do end-to-end products in India is very much a possibility," Sinha pointed out. When asked about the shortage of chips, and its impact on the global markets and emerging economies such as India, Sinha said AMD is witnessing a mixed-demand environment. Its execution has been excellent, resulting in first-quarter revenue and earnings that surpassed expectations. (PTI)

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