AMD has become the cleaner growth story in semiconductors, while Intel continues to fight for credibility on its long-running turnaround.
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., AMD
AMD’s rise has been driven by its server business. In Q1 2026, the company posted $5.8 billion in Data Center revenue, a 57% jump from the same period the year before. Demand for EPYC server processors stayed strong, and shipments of Instinct AI accelerators kept growing.
Cloud providers and companies building out AI infrastructure have been the main buyers. AMD does not need to fully displace Nvidia or Intel to grow. Even a modest share of the AI accelerator market could add meaningful revenue, given how large and high-value these markets are.
Beyond data centers, AMD also sells chips for consumer PCs, gaming, and embedded systems. That mix gives the company more than one way to grow.
That said, weaker consumer demand or rising component costs could still hurt parts of the business. AMD is not without risk, but its recent execution has been consistent.
Wall Street reflects that confidence. AMD carries a Moderate Buy consensus, with 28 Buy ratings, 13 Holds, and just 1 Sell. The stock has rallied sharply on AI and server momentum, which means its valuation already prices in a lot of future growth.
Any slowdown in Data Center sales could lead to a sharp pullback.
Intel still has scale, deep engineering talent, and long relationships across the PC and server industries. It is also trying to build Intel Foundry into a viable manufacturing option for outside chip designers.
Q1 2026 results showed improving demand and more confidence around Intel’s server and manufacturing roadmap. Some analysts have grown more positive about its chances to win back server share and attract foundry customers.
But Intel remains a turnaround story. The foundry operation requires heavy capital spending. Progress needs to show up in margins and cash flow before the investment case becomes clearer.
Intel’s analyst consensus sits at Hold. It has 15 Buy ratings but also 28 Holds and 4 Sells. Sentiment has improved, but analysts are not yet convinced the recovery is far enough along.
Intel may offer higher percentage upside if the turnaround works. But that comes with much higher risk compared to AMD’s current position.
AMD has the stronger fundamental case today. Its server business is growing fast, AI exposure is expanding, and management has delivered results.
Intel has real assets and turnaround potential. But investors are still waiting on proof, not looking at present strength.
In short, AMD is the growth stock. Intel is the recovery bet.
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