AMD

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AMD
$254,24
+$0,97(+0,38%)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-15 08:54 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-15 08:54, Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) is priced at $254,24, with a total market cap of $415,86B, a P/E ratio of 80,54, and a dividend yield of 0,00%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $252,99 and $254,56. The current price is 0,49% above the day's low and 0,12% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 24,71M. Over the past 52 weeks, AMD has traded between $96,45 to $267,07, and the current price is -4,80% away from the 52-week high.

AMD Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$246,83
Market Cap$415,86B
Volume24,71M
P/E Ratio80,54
Dividend Yield (TTM)0,00%
Dividend Amount$0,01
Diluted EPS (TTM)2,65
Net Income (FY)$4,33B
Revenue (FY)$34,63B
Earnings Date2026-05-05
EPS Estimate1,29
Revenue Estimate$9,85B
Shares Outstanding1,68B
Beta (1Y)1.963
Ex-Dividend Date1995-04-28
Dividend Payment Date1995-05-24

About AMD

Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. operates as a semiconductor company worldwide. The company operates in two segments, Computing and Graphics; and Enterprise, Embedded and Semi-Custom. Its products include x86 microprocessors as an accelerated processing unit, chipsets, discrete and integrated graphics processing units (GPUs), data center and professional GPUs, and development services; and server and embedded processors, and semi-custom System-on-Chip (SoC) products, development services, and technology for game consoles. The company provides processors for desktop and notebook personal computers under the AMD Ryzen, AMD Ryzen PRO, Ryzen Threadripper, Ryzen Threadripper PRO, AMD Athlon, AMD Athlon PRO, AMD FX, AMD A-Series, and AMD PRO A-Series processors brands; discrete GPUs for desktop and notebook PCs under the AMD Radeon graphics, AMD Embedded Radeon graphics brands; and professional graphics products under the AMD Radeon Pro and AMD FirePro graphics brands. It also offers Radeon Instinct, Radeon PRO V-series, and AMD Instinct accelerators for servers; chipsets under the AMD trademark; microprocessors for servers under the AMD EPYC; embedded processor solutions under the AMD Athlon, AMD Geode, AMD Ryzen, AMD EPYC, AMD R-Series, and G-Series processors brands; and customer-specific solutions based on AMD CPU, GPU, and multi-media technologies, as well as semi-custom SoC products. It serves original equipment manufacturers, public cloud service providers, original design manufacturers, system integrators, independent distributors, online retailers, and add-in-board manufacturers through its direct sales force, independent distributors, and sales representatives. The company was incorporated in 1969 and is headquartered in Santa Clara, California.
SectorTechnology
IndustrySemiconductors
CEOLisa T. Su
HeadquartersSanta Clara,CA,US
Official Websitehttps://www.amd.com
Employees (FY)31,00K
Average Revenue (1Y)$1,11M
Net Income per Employee$139,83K

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Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) Latest News

2026-03-11 10:39

Michael Burry 指控英伟达花 1.5 亿美元阻止 AMD 接手甲骨文 AI 数据中心合同

Gate News 消息,3 月 11 日,因预测 2008 年次贷危机而闻名的投资人 Michael Burry 发帖指控英伟达在甲骨文与 OpenAI 的 AI 数据中心项目中采取反竞争行为。Burry 称,OpenAI 退出与甲骨文的合作,原因是 OpenAI 想要英伟达下一代 Ruben 芯片,而非甲骨文已大量借贷采购的 Blackwell 芯片,OpenAI 认为「建筑还没建好,芯片就会过时」。随后英伟达介入,花费约 1.5 亿美元阻止 AMD 接手该合同。Burry 称这种做法「像黑手党」,应成为反垄断案件。Burry 还透露,美国司法部已对英伟达进行了近两年的调查,但他认为在特朗普政府下不会提起诉讼。他提到甲骨文与 OpenAI 仍保持合作关系,Meta 接手了 OpenAI 放弃的建设项目,并称尽管「AI 行业利益共同体都说没什么大不了」,但这「绝对是件大事」。英伟达和美国司法部均未对上述指控公开回应。美国司法部确实自 2024 年起对英伟达展开反垄断调查,2025 年 9 月已向英伟达及第三方公司发出传票。

2026-03-02 09:08

美股盘前明星科技股普跌,美光科技和 AMD 跌超 3.5%

ChainCatcher 消息,据金十报道,美股盘前明星科技股普遍下跌,美光科技跌超 3.5%,AMD 跌幅也超过 3.5%。阿斯麦、阿里巴巴和英特尔均跌超 3%。

2026-02-24 21:02

美股三大股指收涨,AMD 大涨超 8%

ChainCatcher 消息,据 Gate 行情数据显示,美股周二收盘,道指初步收涨 0.76%,标普 500 指数涨 0.77%,纳指涨 1.04%。甲骨文 (ORCL.N) 涨 3.4%,AMD (AMD.O) 涨 8.7%,英特尔 (INTC.O) 涨近 6%,Paypal (PYPL.O) 涨 6.7%。纳斯达克中国金龙指数收涨 1.37%,小鹏汽车 (XPEV.N) 和万国数据 (GDS.O) 均涨超 6%。

2026-02-24 12:20

Meta Platforms 与 AMD 达成协议,斥资数十亿美元采购人工智能设备

Foresight News 消息,据 coincentra 报道,Meta Platforms 与 AMD 达成协议,斥资数十亿美元采购人工智能设备。

Hot Posts su Advanced Micro Devices (AMD)

CryptoFrontier

CryptoFrontier

39 minuti fa
Susquehanna Investment Research raised Intel's price target to $80 per share on April 23, ahead of the company's Q1 2026 earnings release, citing strong server CPU demand driven by agentic artificial intelligence workloads. The new target represents a 25% upside from Intel's Tuesday close of $63.81 per share. Supply constraints are expected to peak in Q1 2026 and ease in Q2 2026, supporting above-seasonal performance for the remainder of the year, according to analyst Christopher Roland's customer report. ## Analyst Upgrade Rationale: Server Strength vs. PC Weakness Susquehanna expects Intel's Q1 2026 results to meet or slightly exceed expectations, primarily driven by stronger server CPU demand but partially offset by weak PC original design manufacturer (ODM) shipments. Roland noted that Q1 ODM shipment trends are weaker than previously anticipated, creating downside risk to the client computing group (CCG) segment. The analyst's CCG forecast is below the market consensus expectation of a 13% sequential decline. Despite strong server performance, Roland maintains a "neutral" rating on Intel, citing memory chip shortages that are constraining PC assembly. He expects ODM shipments to decline by double-digit percentages throughout 2026 as storage chip shortages persist. On Intel's foundry business, Roland characterized the company's decision to join the Terafab project with SpaceX and Tesla as "interesting" and expressed optimism about external customer adoption of Intel's 14A manufacturing process, describing some partnerships as "very active." ## The CPU Demand Inflection: Why Agentic AI Shifts the Calculus For the past two years, the artificial intelligence industry narrative has been dominated by GPU capabilities—a dynamic that propelled NVIDIA's stock to historic highs. CPUs played a supporting role in AI data centers, primarily handling generic control and basic scheduling during the training phase, where GPU parallel computing power handled the most computationally intensive matrix operations. This dynamic is shifting fundamentally with the emergence of agentic AI and reinforcement learning workloads. Unlike simple text generation, agentic AI breaks a single user request into a complete workflow; the model executes an entire process rather than generating a single answer. When AI transitions from "compute once" to "execute a workflow," system dependency on CPUs increases significantly. Many critical tasks are ill-suited for GPU execution: task orchestration, thread scheduling, process management, sandbox execution, preprocessing and postprocessing, cache coordination, and state maintenance are all traditional CPU workloads. In multi-agent scenarios where multiple agents run concurrently, invoke tools, and share state, demands on CPU core count, thread count, single-core performance, and memory management capabilities increase substantially. SemiAnalysis chief analyst Dylan Patel stated in an April 8 interview that AI workload paradigms are shifting from simple text generation to complex agentic and reinforcement learning applications, and CPUs face "extremely severe capacity shortages." This assessment is corroborated by TrendForce research: current AI data center CPU-to-GPU ratios stand at approximately 1:4 to 1:8, but in the agentic AI era, this ratio is expected to shift to 1:1 to 1:2. ## Market Size Expansion and CPU Revaluation The structural shift is driving substantial market growth. Creative Strategies forecasts that the data center CPU market will expand from $25 billion in 2026 to $60 billion by 2030; when agentic AI-related demand is factored in, the addressable market could approach $100 billion. This revaluation has triggered supply-side responses. Both Intel and AMD announced price increases on select CPU product lines at the end of Q1 2026. More significantly, NVIDIA and Arm both announced entry into the server CPU market in March 2026—a GPU giant and an IP licensing company making identical strategic moves in the same month is not coincidental but rather a concentrated market signal. ## Competitive Landscape: Intel's Eroding Dominance Intel's Xeon processors once commanded over 95% of the data center CPU market. This dominance began eroding in 2021 when Intel 7 process yield issues caused Xeon Sapphire Rapids to delay nearly two years, opening a market gap for AMD's EPYC Milan. Intel plans two flagship products for 2026. The Xeon 6+ (Clearwater Forest), based on the Darkmont architecture, will offer 288 cores and 288 threads with a thermal design power (TDP) of approximately 450 watts. The Xeon 7 (Diamond Rapids), based on Panther Cove-X architecture, will reach up to 256 cores and 256 threads with a TDP of 650 watts. Both products will be manufactured on Intel's most advanced 18A process and will introduce Foveros Direct hybrid bonding technology for the first time. However, TrendForce warns that ongoing 18A process yield challenges may push both products' mass production timelines to 2027. AMD's competitive trajectory appears more stable. Its 2026 flagship EPYC Venice will employ TSMC's N2 process with Zen 6 architecture and advanced CoWoS-L and SoIC packaging, delivering 256 cores and 512 threads through simultaneous multithreading (SMT)—the highest thread count in the current market. TrendForce expects AMD to continue gaining market share from Intel throughout 2026. ## New Entrants Reshape the Competitive Landscape Beyond Intel and AMD, a wave of non-traditional competitors is entering the server CPU market at unprecedented speed, seeking to fundamentally reshape competitive dynamics. In March 2026, NVIDIA announced the Vera CPU as a standalone product to address customer demand for more flexible CPU-to-GPU configurations. Vera employs NVIDIA's proprietary Olympus architecture, built on TSMC's N3 process with CoWoS-R packaging, and delivers 88 cores and 176 threads with 1.8 terabytes per second of NVLink-C2C interconnect bandwidth, enabling shared memory with NVIDIA GPUs. NVIDIA also introduced the Vera CPU rack, integrating 256 CPUs per rack for a total of 22,528 cores, 45,056 threads, and 400 terabytes of aggregate memory. Also in March 2026, Arm unveiled its first in-house CPU product, the Arm AGI CPU, ending 35 years of pure licensing business. Built on TSMC's N3 process with the Neoverse V3 architecture, the AGI CPU provides 136 cores and 136 threads at 300 watts TDP, supporting DDR5-8800 memory and PCIe Gen6. Arm simultaneously launched two rack configurations: an air-cooled version integrating 60 AGI CPUs (8,160 cores, approximately 180 terabytes of memory) and a liquid-cooled version supporting 336 CPUs (45,696 cores and 1 petabyte of memory). Major cloud service providers are accelerating their own CPU development. Amazon Web Services released Graviton5 (192 cores and 192 threads on TSMC's N3 process) in December 2025, deploying it alongside its custom Trainium 3 AI ASIC to reduce AI compute costs. Microsoft launched Cobalt 200 (132 cores and 132 threads on N3 process) in November 2025. Google plans to release bare-metal Axion C4A.metal and next-generation Axion N4A in 2026, emphasizing cost-performance optimization. ## Valuation Concerns Temper Enthusiasm While Intel's recent stock performance is striking and agentic AI's strong server CPU demand provides a substantive rationale for a positive outlook, analyst sentiment remains cautious amid intensifying competition and Intel's ongoing operational challenges. Of 52 analysts covering the stock tracked by media sources, only 10 assign a "buy" rating, while 6 assign a "sell" rating—a sell-rating concentration more than double the S&P 500 average. Intel's current trading price commands a 27% premium to the consensus analyst target price, suggesting the stock has appreciated too rapidly. The stock's current price-to-earnings ratio exceeds 90x, an all-time high and 50% above the peak valuation during the dot-com bubble; the chip sector average P/E ratio is approximately 21x. ## Frequently Asked Questions **Q: Why is server CPU demand surging if GPUs have dominated AI infrastructure for the past two years?** AI workloads are shifting from simple text generation (dominated by GPU matrix operations) to agentic AI and reinforcement learning workflows that require extensive CPU involvement for task orchestration, thread scheduling, process management, and state maintenance. This structural shift is expected to increase CPU-to-GPU ratios in AI data centers from 1:4–1:8 to 1:1–1:2. **Q: What is Intel's main competitive risk in the server CPU market?** Intel faces execution risk on its 18A process node, with TrendForce warning that both the Xeon 6+ and Xeon 7 flagship products planned for 2026 may not reach mass production until 2027 due to yield challenges. Meanwhile, AMD's EPYC Venice is on track for 2026 using TSMC's more mature N2 process, and new entrants including NVIDIA, Arm, and cloud providers are all launching competitive products on TSMC's N3 process. **Q: Why does Susquehanna maintain a neutral rating on Intel despite raising its price target to $80?** While server CPU demand is strong, Susquehanna notes that memory chip shortages are constraining PC assembly and expects ODM shipments to decline by double-digit percentages throughout 2026. The neutral rating reflects a balanced view: positive server fundamentals are offset by PC segment weakness and competitive execution risks.
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