Key Takeaways
- Advanced Micro Devices experienced premarket gains reaching 18.8% following impressive Q1 financial results.
- Seaport Global elevated AMD to buy status with a $430 price target; shares traded at $355.26 prior to this adjustment.
- The chipmaker obtained superior manufacturing capacity from TSMC, driving positive analyst sentiment.
- Server CPU market momentum continues building, with Baird forecasting growth exceeding 35% CAGR through 2030.
- AMD’s GPU division faces ongoing scrutiny, with the MI455 rack-scale product expected during the second half of the year.
Advanced Micro Devices shares experienced dramatic premarket appreciation after delivering quarterly results that exceeded analyst expectations on all major metrics, with gains reaching 18.8%. Should these increases persist through market close, the performance would represent AMD’s strongest post-earnings session since January 2019.
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., AMD
Shares were changing hands near $355.26 before the earnings release, reflecting a 260% appreciation over the trailing twelve months. Several Wall Street firms subsequently increased their price projections.
Seaport Global Securities acted quickly, shifting AMD from neutral to buy while establishing a $430 price objective. Analyst Jay Goldberg pointed to Intel’s recent performance as a leading indicator. “In hindsight, Intel’s results were a very clear signal that AMD’s business was picking up,” he noted.
The rating change extended beyond surface-level metrics.
AMD revealed it obtained superior manufacturing allocation from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company relative to market expectations. In an environment where semiconductor demand remains elevated, securing production capacity determines which companies can execute on opportunities versus those left waiting.
“Our guiding thesis is that companies with access to capacity will outperform as demand ripples across the industry,” Goldberg explained.
Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon similarly adopted a more optimistic stance following the earnings release. His financial projections show AMD producing adjusted EPS exceeding $14 in 2027, advancing toward $20 by 2028. The FactSet consensus remains substantially lower, placing estimates under $12 and $16 for those respective periods.
Server CPU Market Powers Current Momentum
Immediate growth drivers center on expanding server CPU demand. Baird elevated its price objective to $625 and anticipates compound annual growth exceeding 35% for the server CPU segment through 2030, powered by artificial intelligence computing requirements.
Wolfe Research and BofA Securities both established $450 targets. RBC Capital adjusted its objective to $400, highlighting robust server CPU revenue and favorable forward guidance. Northland positioned its target at $320.
Ten analysts increased their earnings projections for the coming period, based on InvestingPro data.
Goldberg previously maintained a cautious position while awaiting AMD’s MI450 GPU production ramp before turning constructive. However, he recognized that CPU demand has “pulled up the timeline considerably.”
GPU Division Faces Ongoing Evaluation
Some analysts maintain reservations. Morgan Stanley’s Joseph Moore, who assigns an equal-weight rating, observed that AMD’s GPU operations remain “in a holding pattern” pending the MI455 rack-scale introduction scheduled for later this year.
“What matters is the rack-scale launch in the second half, which we continue to view as a show-me story given inconclusive customer feedback thus far,” Moore stated.
Jefferies analyst Blayne Curtis, who maintains a buy rating on AMD, concurred that “GPU execution in the back half remains the key swing factor.”
AMD executives indicated early MI455 feedback provides visibility into expanded market opportunities, though specific second-half guidance was not provided.
Rasgon’s elevated price projections and Moore’s measured approach illustrate a market largely convinced by the CPU narrative, while the GPU storyline continues developing.

