AMD

Advanced Micro Devices Price

AMD
$464.71
+$3.52(+0.76%)

*Data last updated: 2026-05-11 18:42 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-05-11 18:42, Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) is priced at $464.71, with a total market cap of $742.23B, a P/E ratio of 80.54, and a dividend yield of 0.00%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $450.73 and $471.96. The current price is 3.10% above the day's low and 1.53% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 58.13M. Over the past 52 weeks, AMD has traded between $111.01 to $471.96, and the current price is -1.53% away from the 52-week high.

AMD Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$408.46
Market Cap$742.23B
Volume58.13M
P/E Ratio80.54
Dividend Yield (TTM)0.00%
Dividend Amount$0.01
Diluted EPS (TTM)3.06
Net Income (FY)$4.33B
Revenue (FY)$34.63B
Earnings Date2026-08-04
EPS Estimate1.58
Revenue Estimate$11.18B
Shares Outstanding1.81B
Beta (1Y)2.399
Ex-Dividend Date1995-04-28
Dividend Payment Date1995-05-24

About AMD

Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. operates as a semiconductor company worldwide. The company operates in two segments, Computing and Graphics; and Enterprise, Embedded and Semi-Custom. Its products include x86 microprocessors as an accelerated processing unit, chipsets, discrete and integrated graphics processing units (GPUs), data center and professional GPUs, and development services; and server and embedded processors, and semi-custom System-on-Chip (SoC) products, development services, and technology for game consoles. The company provides processors for desktop and notebook personal computers under the AMD Ryzen, AMD Ryzen PRO, Ryzen Threadripper, Ryzen Threadripper PRO, AMD Athlon, AMD Athlon PRO, AMD FX, AMD A-Series, and AMD PRO A-Series processors brands; discrete GPUs for desktop and notebook PCs under the AMD Radeon graphics, AMD Embedded Radeon graphics brands; and professional graphics products under the AMD Radeon Pro and AMD FirePro graphics brands. It also offers Radeon Instinct, Radeon PRO V-series, and AMD Instinct accelerators for servers; chipsets under the AMD trademark; microprocessors for servers under the AMD EPYC; embedded processor solutions under the AMD Athlon, AMD Geode, AMD Ryzen, AMD EPYC, AMD R-Series, and G-Series processors brands; and customer-specific solutions based on AMD CPU, GPU, and multi-media technologies, as well as semi-custom SoC products. It serves original equipment manufacturers, public cloud service providers, original design manufacturers, system integrators, independent distributors, online retailers, and add-in-board manufacturers through its direct sales force, independent distributors, and sales representatives. The company was incorporated in 1969 and is headquartered in Santa Clara, California.
SectorTechnology
IndustrySemiconductors
CEOLisa T. Su
HeadquartersSanta Clara,CA,US
Official Websitehttps://www.amd.com
Employees (FY)31.00K
Average Revenue (1Y)$1.11M
Net Income per Employee$139.83K

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Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) is currently trading at $464.71, with a 24h change of +0.76%. The 52-week trading range is $111.01–$471.96.

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Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) Latest News

2026-05-11 01:41Trader NMTD.HL Accumulates $15.2M Short Position in U.S. Storage Stocks, Down $2.47M on May 11According to on-chain analyst Ai Yi, trader NMTD.HL (@NMTD8) has accumulated a cumulative short position of $15.2 million in U.S. storage sector stocks on May 11, comprising $11.22 million in SNDK, $2.54 million in AMD, and $1.45 million in MU. The position is currently unrealized loss of $2.47 million.2026-05-08 16:30Intel Surges 8% to $600B Market Cap; AMD Hits Record High at $710B TodayAccording to Gate data, Intel surged 8% today (May 8), with market cap approaching $600 billion. AMD rose nearly 8%, pushing its market cap to $710 billion, marking a new all-time high.2026-05-07 02:01OpenAI Launches MRC Protocol with AMD, Broadcom, Intel, Microsoft, and NvidiaOpenAI announced it has collaborated with AMD, Broadcom, Intel, Microsoft, and Nvidia to launch Multipath Reliable Connection (MRC), an open-source networking protocol. MRC is designed to accelerate large-scale AI training clusters, improve reliability, and significantly reduce GPU idle time.2026-05-06 14:06OpenAI Launches MRC Network Protocol With AMD, Intel, NVIDIA; Supports 100,000+ GPUsAccording to OpenAI's announcement on May 6, the company partnered with AMD, Broadcom, Intel, Microsoft, and NVIDIA to launch Multipath Reliable Connection (MRC), an open network protocol for large-scale AI training cluster GPU interconnection. The protocol splits single data transmissions across hundreds of pathways to reduce core congestion and enables microsecond-level bypass of link and switch failures. OpenAI has already deployed MRC in its Stargate supercomputer (built with OCI) and Microsoft's Fairwater supercomputer, allowing connection of over 100,000 GPUs with just two switch layers while reducing power consumption and hardware requirements. The MRC specification has been released to the industry through the Open Compute Project.2026-05-06 08:41Chinese Chip Designers Devote 50% of Revenue to R&D in Q1 2026, Outpacing AMD and IntelAccording to South China Morning Post, Chinese chip designers Moore Threads and MetaX devoted 50% and 45% of revenue to research and development in the quarter ended March 2026, respectively, outpacing AMD and Intel's 20-30% R&D-to-revenue ratios in recent years. However, Chinese firms still trail U.S. counterparts in absolute spending, with Nvidia reporting $18.5 billion in R&D for the year ended January 25, 2026, compared with $8 billion at AMD and $13.8 billion at Intel for the year ended December 27, 2025.

Hot Posts About Advanced Micro Devices (AMD)

LootboxPhobia

LootboxPhobia

1 hours ago
Investing.com — Rackspace Technology (NASDAQ: RXT) shares rose as much as 10% Monday morning, extending the uptrend after a sharp rebound last week. The stock surged as much as 56% in a single day last Friday, and since the company released its earnings report on May 7 and announced a partnership with AMD, the cumulative gain has exceeded 200%. According to the latest public data, the current short interest ratio is 24.55%, and the days to cover are 3.1. To some extent, this round of gains has been driven by short covering. Last week, Rackspace Technology and AMD announced that they have signed a memorandum of understanding to lay the groundwork for a multi-year strategic partnership between the two sides. The initiative aims to build an enterprise AI cloud platform for regulated enterprises and sovereign workloads. The partnership plan will integrate AMD Instinct GPUs and EPYC CPUs into a fully managed, governed technology stack, with Rackspace responsible for end-to-end management—from chips to business outcomes. _This article was translated with the assistance of artificial intelligence. For more information, please see our Terms of Use._ Rackspace Follow Analyze RXT Included in our AI-selected strategies · View strategy details 5.49 ▲+1.970(+55.97%) Close · 09/05 · USD 5.68 ▲+0.190(+3.45%) Pre-market · 11:24:43 1 day 1 week 1 month 6 months 1 year 5 years Max Created with Highcharts 11.4.8 14:00 15:00 16:00 17:00 18:00 19:00 3:45 Analyze RXT
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TestnetScholar

TestnetScholar

1 hours ago
For months, retail traders watched the semiconductor rally from the sidelines. Now they’re jumping in, and they’re doing it with both feet. A recent Stocktwits poll found that 42% of retail traders favor AI and chip stocks over software, which drew just 29% of respondents. The numbers behind the buying spree ----------------------------------- Retail ownership of single stocks has climbed to a record 14%, the highest level since at least 2018. For context, that figure sat at roughly 12% during the 2021 meme stock boom, when GameStop and AMC were consuming every corner of financial social media. The PHLX Semiconductor Index recently posted 18 consecutive days of gains, the longest winning streak on record for the benchmark. Intel’s strong performance contributed meaningfully to that streak. Bloomberg Intelligence projects semiconductor revenues will grow 57% by 2026, a pace that roughly doubles the broader tech sector’s expected growth rate. What’s fueling the confidence ----------------------------- Relaxed US-China export restrictions have reopened a massive market for American semiconductor companies. Nvidia and AMD can now resume and expand chip sales to China, removing what had been a significant overhang on revenue projections for both companies. Meta has committed over $100B to AMD across a five-year deal. Nvidia, meanwhile, announced a $5B investment in Intel. Why the enthusiasm is making people nervous ------------------------------------------- Record retail ownership of 14% in single stocks means individual investors are more exposed to equity risk than they were during the meme stock frenzy, which ended with sharp drawdowns in the most popular names. There’s also the question of whether 57% revenue growth by 2026 is already priced in. If growth materializes but comes in at, say, 45% instead of 57%, the stocks could sell off even as the underlying businesses perform well by any reasonable standard. Expert opinion on the rally’s sustainability is mixed. When retail investors reach peak allocation to a sector, the risk-reward profile shifts unfavorably as the marginal buyer runs out of dry powder. **Disclosure:** This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.
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ZKProofster

ZKProofster

2 hours ago
Just caught something worth paying attention to in the semiconductor space. AMD just reported Q1 numbers that sent shockwaves through the market—revenue hit $10.25bn (up 38% year-over-year), but here's the real story: their net profit jumped 95%, and more importantly, data center revenue alone pulled in $5.8bn, up 57% and now representing over half their total business. Their stock ripped 20%+ in after-hours trading, adding roughly $107.8bn in market cap in a single day. On the surface this looks like a clean earnings beat, but what actually matters is the strategic shift buried in these numbers. AMD isn't recovering as a general CPU player anymore—they're all-in on AI infrastructure. Lisa Su basically confirmed it: they're now projecting the 2030 server CPU market at $120bn (up from previous estimates), with growth accelerating past 35% CAGR. The message is unmissable: as AI workloads get more complex, the CPU-to-GPU ratio is shifting from the old 1:4 or 1:8 split toward closer to 1:1, sometimes even flipping in dense agent scenarios. This matters because it means more silicon, more orders, more everything. The immediate beneficiary in China's supply chain is obvious—Tongfu Microelectronics. They handle over 80% of AMD's packaging and testing for everything from CPUs to the MI300/MI400 series. When AMD's production ramps, Tongfu's order book gets fat. Their stock hit the daily limit right alongside AMD on May 6th, and that's not random. This is the 'selling water during the gold rush' play: you don't need to bet on which company wins, just position yourself in the infrastructure layer that benefits from scale expansion. But here's where it gets interesting—and messy. AMD's aggressive pricing on their MI series GPUs (MI300X at $15,000 with 192GB versus Nvidia's H100 at $32,000 with 80GB) is creating real pressure on domestic GPU makers. They're getting squeezed from above by better-capitalized players with stronger ecosystems, and AMD's cost advantage is eating into what little market share window they had for domestic substitution plays. Some third-party data suggested AMD moved roughly $100mn worth of MI308 chips into China in Q1 alone. Here's the thing though—and I think most people are glossing over this—the current euphoria feels uncomfortably similar to the 2021-2022 chip shortage cycle. Back then, supply was tight, prices exploded, everyone in the supply chain made money hand over fist, and valuations went parabolic. Then demand normalized, inventories reversed, and the correction was brutal. The structural difference this time is that AI demand isn't just inventory restocking—it's tied to real workload migration and application buildout, which theoretically gives it deeper staying power. But cyclical risk is still cyclical risk. AMD's growth is now almost entirely dependent on data center and AI revenue. Their gaming business is still weak, PC demand is recovering but has no real catalyst. Translation: if AI capex cycles slow down even slightly, their growth rate and profit elasticity will compress much faster than a diversified player. For Chinese A-shares chasing this computing power narrative, the risk isn't whether the market is booming—it's whether quarterly performance can actually keep up with the valuation run. AMD's numbers today are impressive in yuan terms and profit growth, but they're also a concentrated bet on one cycle. That double-edged sword cuts both ways.
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