AMD Stock Jumps as AI Chip Demand Powers Record Quarterly Results
Advanced Micro Devices Inc. today posted a dramatic beat on first-quarter earnings and revenue, sending its stock surging more than 8% in after-hours trading. The company's data center segment exploded as enterprises and cloud providers scrambled to deploy AI-capable processors.
"The demand for AMD's EPYC CPUs and Instinct GPUs is being supercharged by the rapid expansion of generative AI workloads," said Patrick Moorhead, founder and chief analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy. "These results confirm AMD is a top-tier AI play."
AMD disclosed revenue of $5.5 billion, up 12% year-over-year and well above consensus estimates of $5.2 billion. Non-GAAP earnings per share came in at $0.65, beating the $0.58 expected.
For the current quarter, AMD guided revenue of $5.6 billion, plus or minus $100 million, surpassing the $5.3 billion analysts had predicted. The strong outlook reflects continued momentum in data center chip sales.
Background
The explosive growth of AI workloads, particularly large language models and inference engines, has created massive demand for specialized processors. AMD, traditionally second to Nvidia in GPUs and to Intel in CPUs, has successfully positioned itself as a strong alternative in both categories.

The company's latest MI300X GPU series has gained traction in high-performance AI clusters, while its EPYC processors are increasingly chosen for cloud servers running AI tasks. This dual strength allows AMD to capture spending from both training and inference workloads.
What This Means
AMD's strong results indicate that the AI chip market is not a one-horse race. While Nvidia remains dominant, AMD is closing the gap and capturing a growing share of spending by hyperscalers and enterprise customers.

For investors, this earnings beat reinforces AMD's long-term growth narrative, especially as AI adoption spreads beyond first movers like OpenAI and Microsoft. However, supply chain constraints and competition from Nvidia's upcoming Blackwell architecture remain risks.
"AMD is executing flawlessly in a market that's expanding faster than anyone expected," added Cynthia Smith, analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy. "The guidance suggests this isn't a one-quarter wonder, but the start of a sustained growth cycle."
The stock move underscores investor optimism that AMD can maintain its upward trajectory. Shares are now up more than 30% year to date, outpacing both the broader market and most chip peers.
AMD's data center revenue, which includes both CPUs and GPUs, grew 35% year-over-year to $2.8 billion. The company noted that its AI GPU sales alone were approximately $1.5 billion, and it expects that figure to accelerate in the second half of 2024.
Client segment revenue also beat expectations, rising 18% to $1.2 billion, helped by a partial recovery in the PC market and growing demand for AI-enhanced laptops equipped with AMD Ryzen processors.
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