The closing of the deal comes on the heels of Nvidia Corp’s decision to abandon its plans to buy SoftBank-owned Arm Ltd, citing regulatory hurdles.
AMD’s transaction moved ahead with all necessary approvals for the acquisition, it said.
AMD Chief Executive Officer Lisa Su told Reuters that, between AMD’s processor technologies and Xilinx’s system on chips and field programmable chips, the two businesses are complimentary. “That was our focus in talking to the regulatory authorities across the world,” Su said. She added that Arm was an important partner for AMD but declined to say more about Arm’s possible next steps.
The deal, announced in October 2020, was originally valued at $35 billion, but the rise of AMD’s stock value has pushed up the price tag, according to AMD.
AMD shares soared more than 4% on Monday. Other chip makers also gained.
With the Xilinx acquisition, Su said AMD will be able to increase its breadth in key markets like data centers where Xilinx has a strong network and AI presence, as well as in the 5G communications, automotive, industrial, aerospace and defense markets. “Those are all markets that AMD has had very little presence in and they all need high performance computing as well,” she said.



Comments
Welcome to The Banner's subscriber-only commenting community. Please review our community guidelines.