Shares of AMD began Friday’s trading session at $449.70, approaching the 52-week peak of $469.21. The semiconductor stock has climbed more than fourfold from its annual low of $107.67.
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., AMD
Advanced Micro Devices disclosed first quarter 2026 financial results on May 5. The company posted earnings per share of $1.37, exceeding the Street’s consensus forecast of $1.29. Total revenue reached $10.25 billion, surpassing analyst projections of $9.90 billion. This represented a 37.8% increase versus the comparable period one year earlier.
The most impressive performance came from the Data Center division. Sales in this segment expanded 57% year over year to approach $5.8 billion. Strong demand for AMD’s MI-series AI accelerators, Instinct products, and EPYC processors fueled this expansion as hyperscale cloud customers accelerated AI infrastructure investments.
The Gaming and Client segments told a contrasting narrative — these divisions constitute a smaller portion of overall operations as AMD intensifies its focus on data center and artificial intelligence markets.
During the same week, AMD introduced new Ryzen PRO 9000 workstation processors featuring 3D V-Cache technology, designed specifically for AI workloads, simulation applications, and gaming purposes. This product launch may provide additional support for the Client and Gaming divisions as 2026 progresses.
The stronger-than-anticipated quarterly results sparked numerous upward revisions to analyst price targets. Bank of America increased its objective from $450 to $500 while reaffirming a Buy recommendation. Mizuho pushed even higher, elevating its target from $415 to $515 alongside an Outperform rating. DA Davidson adjusted upward from $375 to $425 with a Buy designation.
Zacks Investment Research upgraded AMD from Hold to Strong Buy immediately following the earnings announcement. The consensus perspective among Wall Street analysts now reflects a Moderate Buy rating with a mean price target of $396.95 — though this average incorporates more conservative projections from certain firms.
Citi represented one of those cautious perspectives. The investment bank raised its price objective from $248 to $358 yet maintained its Neutral rating. At present trading levels, even Citi’s revised target suggests approximately 20% downside potential.
UBS highlighted that both AMD and Arm are capturing server market share at Intel’s expense — a structural trend that bolsters the optimistic outlook for AMD’s data center operations.
For the second quarter of 2026, AMD provided revenue guidance of roughly $11.2 billion, with a range of plus or minus $300 million. The chipmaker is targeting adjusted gross profit margins near 56%. Server CPU sales are anticipated to increase more than 70% year over year during this period.
Regarding insider transactions, Executive Vice President Mark Papermaster divested 31,320 shares at an average selling price of $350 on April 24, generating approximately $10.96 million in proceeds. Chief Executive Officer Lisa Su sold 85,000 shares at $198.77 during March. Both transactions occurred under pre-established Rule 10b5-1 trading arrangements.
Institutional investors hold 71.34% of outstanding shares. Bank Julius Baer expanded its AMD position by 1.9% during the fourth quarter, increasing its holdings to 98,090 shares valued at $21 million as of the reporting period’s conclusion.
Advanced Micro Devices maintains a market capitalization of $733 billion, trades at a price-to-earnings ratio of 147, and exhibits a beta coefficient of 2.40.
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