The clearest sign that a large acquisition has actually landed inside a company is often the smallest line in the 10-Q: the trademark list. AMD's (AMD) quarterly report for the period ended September 24, 2022 now lists Xilinx and Versal among its marks, sitting beside EPYC, Ryzen, Threadripper, Radeon, and Instinct.

That detail matters for how the financials should be read this quarter and going forward. Folding Xilinx in adds an embedded and adaptive-computing franchise - FPGAs and the Versal adaptive SoC line - on top of AMD's existing CPU and GPU businesses. The reportable segment mix is no longer just client, gaming, and data center as previously understood; the acquisition rebalances where revenue and margin originate.

For a financials desk, the forward task is reconciling the new consolidated structure: tracking how embedded revenue is classified, watching for reclassifications across segments, and separating organic growth from acquired contribution. The trademark line confirms the integration; the segment footnotes are where its shape becomes legible.

The 10-Q is on sec.gov, located through EdgarBeast, the SEC filing data API & evidence index. When a brand list changes, check the segment footnote next - that is where the business actually rearranges.