Chip firm Advanced Micro Devices will acquire about $2.1 billion of silicon wafers from GlobalFoundries from 2022 through 2025 in an amended agreement, according to a regulatory filing.
AMD had agreed to buy $1.6 billion worth of chips between 2022 and 2024, according to a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.
Wafers are the large discs of silicon on which computer chips are made.
GlobalFoundries was created when AMD spun off its chip factory operations in 2009 and has supplied AMD since then.
However, GlobalFoundries in 2018 decided to quit pursuing leading edge chipmaking technologies.
Since then, AMD has turned to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co to supply the most critical sections of its computer processors called “chiplets.”
Even though TSMC has become its primary supplier, AMD still relies on some components from GlobalFoundries to tie its chips together.
Earlier this month, GlobalFoundries signed a deal with BMW Group, the German carmaker, to secure semiconductor supplies for the long term.
The agreement guarantees BMW the supply of several million microchips per year.
- Reuters with additional editing by George Russell
READ MORE:
How TSMC could keep selling chips to embattled Huawei despite US ban
BMW looks to China JV, electric cars to deliver higher margins
Darkest Moments of Chip Shortage Have Passed: Securities Times