Semiconductor giant Advanced Micro Devices (AMD 0.56%) was among the stocks to see shares surge thanks to the rise of artificial intelligence (AI) over the past couple of years. But so far, 2025 is a different story.
AMD (AMD 0.56%) stock is creating buzz among investors, who have differing opinions on why it is not rising.
AMD was once a hot chipmaker, but it lost nearly 40% of its value over the past 12 months. It lost its momentum as its sluggish sales of gaming chips partly offset its stronger sales of PC and data center chips, and investors started to question the long-term growth potential of its closely watched artificial intelligence (AI) accelerators.
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.'s stock has declined 53% over the past year, but it appears oversold and may have bottomed around the $110-100 support level. Despite recent challenges, AMD's data center revenue surged 69% YOY, and the company projects solid growth in H2 2025. AMD's forward P/E ratio has dropped below 18, making it a bargain, as the market may have overreacted to its AI GPU struggles.
On Wednesday, Direxion announced that it has released two new single-stock ETFs. These new funds offer distinct leveraged and inverse strategies that focus on Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD).
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.'s Q4 results show 24% revenue growth and 42% EPS increase, yet the stock dropped 10%, presenting a strong buying opportunity. Data center revenue surged 69% YOY, becoming AMD's largest segment, despite market concerns over growth slowdown. AMD's valuation is low compared to peers, with a PEG ratio of 0.53, suggesting significant upside potential.
[00:00:04] Doug McIntyre: So far the surprise to me, this earnings season is that cloud computing is slowing the growth in cloud computing has dropped off.
Advanced Micro Devices Inc AMD is at the center of the AI-fueled semiconductor boom, and traders now have fresh tools to ride—or short—the wave.
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD 0.56%) stock fell following the release of the company's fourth-quarter 2024 results on Feb. 4, and a closer look at the company's quarterly performance and outlook indicates that investors may have overreacted.
AMD (AMD 0.56%) signaled that it could spend close to $8 billion buying shares of AMD stock.
The semiconductor industry has become an intense area of focus in the stock market over the past few years. It's always been important, but the advent of artificial intelligence is driving unprecedented interest.
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.'s chiplet architecture in CPUs and GPUs positions it to outperform Nvidia in the inference market, which has more tailwinds than training. AMD's upcoming MI350 series, set for release in 2025, promises a significant leap in AI performance, potentially challenging Nvidia's market dominance. AMD's CEO projects substantial revenue growth, suggesting AMD could achieve a 17% CAGR by 2028, with a potential EPS increase of 244%.