AMD

Advanced Micro Devices Price

AMD
$337.31
-$11.53(-3.30%)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-27 18:36 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-27 18:36, Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) is priced at $337.31, with a total market cap of $567.05B, a P/E ratio of 80.54, and a dividend yield of 0.00%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $328.83 and $354.86. The current price is 2.57% above the day's low and 4.94% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 81.61M. Over the past 52 weeks, AMD has traded between $96.45 to $354.86, and the current price is -4.94% away from the 52-week high.

AMD Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$305.33
Market Cap$567.05B
Volume81.61M
P/E Ratio80.54
Dividend Yield (TTM)0.00%
Dividend Amount$0.01
Diluted EPS (TTM)2.65
Net Income (FY)$4.33B
Revenue (FY)$34.63B
Earnings Date2026-05-05
EPS Estimate1.28
Revenue Estimate$9.87B
Shares Outstanding1.85B
Beta (1Y)1.963
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 $337.31, with a 24h change of -3.30%. The 52-week trading range is $96.45–$354.86.

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Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) Latest News

2026-04-24 17:36

TradFi Rise Alert: AMD (Advanced Micro Devices / AMD) Rises Over 20%

Gate News: According to the latest Gate TradFi data, AMD (Advanced Micro Devices / AMD) has surged by 20% in a short period. Current volatility is significantly higher than recent averages, indicating increased market activity.

2026-04-16 15:52

AMD Stock Surges Nearly 7% to Record High, EPYC CPU Demand Outpaces Supply

Gate News message, April 16 — Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) stock surged nearly 7% on April 14, closing at $275.91 and reaching an all-time high. The rally was driven by surging demand for the company's EPYC "Turin" processors, which feature a chiplet architecture and are experiencing severe supply constraints. According to Forrest Norrod, AMD's data center business unit lead, demand has grown at an unprecedented pace over the past six to nine months, with no signs of slowdown in the near term. KeyBanc analysts estimate that AMD's EPYC server CPU production capacity is nearly sold out for the full year, with lead times for high-end EPYC processors extending to 8–10 weeks. SemiAnalysis Chief Analyst Dylan Patel highlighted that AI workloads are evolving from simple text generation to complex agentic AI and reinforcement learning, creating "extreme CPU capacity shortages." TrendForce's latest report indicates that current AI data center CPU-to-GPU ratios of 1:4 to 1:8 are expected to narrow significantly to 1:1 to 1:2 in the agentic AI era, further amplifying CPU demand.

2026-03-28 15:30

Ark Invest continued to reduce its holdings in technology stocks such as Nvidia on Friday, buying shares in biotech companies

Gate News report, on March 28, Ark Invest Tracker data shows that Ark Invest continued to reduce its holdings in tech stocks on Friday, following a reduction in tech stocks and cryptocurrency ETFs on Thursday, further selling over 58,000 shares of NVIDIA and over 19,000 shares of AMD, which accounts for 0.1%-0.15% of the total value of the fund. Meanwhile, Ark Invest purchased 48,600 shares of biotech company Arcturus Therapeutics.

2026-03-28 15:20

Cathie Wood's Ark Invest continued to significantly reduce its holdings in technology stocks like Nvidia on Friday.

BlockBeats news, on March 28, according to Ark Invest Tracker statistics, following a significant reduction in technology stocks and cryptocurrency ETFs on Thursday, Ark Invest continued to significantly reduce its holdings in technology stocks such as NVIDIA on Friday. This includes a reduction of over 58,000 shares of NVIDIA and over 19,000 shares of AMD, accounting for 0.1%-0.15% of the fund's total value, while only buying 48,600 shares of biotechnology company Arcturus Therapeutics, indicating a shift from reducing AI chips to medical innovation.

2026-03-27 04:37

Nasdaq Falls into Correction Zone | Rewire News Morning Briefing

Nasdaq Confirms Entry into Correction Zone, Brent Crude Surges to $108. Chip Smuggling Case Burns from Court to Capitol Hill, Apple Transforms Siri into an AI Supermarket. * * * 1|Nasdaq Confirms Correction, Oil Prices, War, and AI Fatigue Crushing Tech Stocks Simultaneously ---------------------------- The Nasdaq fell 2.38% on Thursday, marking an 11% cumulative decline from its historical high on October 29 of last year, officially confirming its entry into correction territory. The S&P 500 dropped 1.74% to 6477 points, recording its largest single-day decline since January. The Dow fell 1.01% to 45960 points. Tech stocks are the hardest hit. Meta dropped nearly 8%, with a ruling on social media addiction being the direct trigger. AMD fell over 7%, Nvidia fell over 4%, and the Philadelphia semiconductor index declined 2.9% in a single day. Micron has seen a nearly 20% decline over five trading days, as the market continues to digest the impact of Google's TurboQuant algorithm significantly reducing AI memory demand. The underlying drivers are oil prices and war expectations. Brent crude rose 5.66% to $108, while WTI increased 4.61% to $94.48. European Central Bank President Lagarde warned the same day that the Iran conflict would drive up inflation, hinting at potential interest rate hikes. The market is pricing in a question: Is this a 2025-style buying opportunity during a correction, or the starting point of a triple pressure from war, inflation, and AI valuation reassessment? (Source: CNBC / The Motley Fool / Reuters / The Street) * * * 2|Senators Call for Freezing Nvidia Export Licenses, Chip Regulation Review Powers Come to the Fore ------------------------------ Senators Warren and Banks wrote to the Department of Commerce, demanding an immediate halt to the approval of Nvidia's export licenses for China and Southeast Asia, covering regions including China, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, and Singapore. The two are simultaneously pushing the "Chip Security Act," the core provision of which is to transfer export license review powers from the Department of Commerce to Congress. The timing of this letter is not a coincidence. The Super Micro case exposed a fact: Export licenses issued by the Department of Commerce are being systematically circumvented, with $2.5 billion worth of hardware flowing to places it should not reach through shell companies. Warren and Banks' logic is straightforward: if the executive branch cannot control the licenses, then the legislative branch should take over. The focus of chip regulation is shifting from technical enforcement issues to a power struggle in Washington. (Source: CNN / Fortune / Tom's Hardware) * * * 3|Iran Builds a Renminbi Toll Station in the Strait of Hormuz --------------------- Iran has not only blocked the Strait of Hormuz. Fortune and Al Jazeera report that Iran is charging passing vessels tolls of up to $2 million, with at least two transactions settled in renminbi, facilitated by a Chinese maritime service company as an intermediary. CIPS (Cross-border Interbank Payment System) saw its transaction volume hit a new high for the year in March. As of March 23, at least 20 vessels have passed through this "pay-per-use channel." Shipowners must submit a complete set of documents to intermediaries designated by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard, including IMO numbers, cargo lists, destinations, and crew lists, which are reviewed one by one by naval personnel of the Revolutionary Guard. The Iranian parliament is drafting legislation to make the temporary tolls a permanent system. Trump announced the same day that the deadline for strikes against Iranian energy facilities would be extended to April 6. But the signal here is not a timeline for war escalation; it is about settlement currency. Iran has turned the world's most critical energy choke point into a renminbi-priced toll machine using wartime control. (Continued from the previous report) (Source: Fortune / Al Jazeera / Asia Times / Foreign Policy) * * * 4|Apple Opens Siri to Gemini and Claude, End of OpenAI's Exclusive Era ------------------------------------------- Bloomberg reported on Thursday that Apple plans to open Siri to third-party AI assistants in iOS 27. Users will be able to select whether to direct questions to Gemini or Claude, rather than just ChatGPT. Apple is expected to make an official announcement on June 8 at WWDC. This means OpenAI will lose its exclusive partnership with Apple. On the same day, two side signals completed the picture. Apple is providing its iPhone design team with rare retention bonuses, as OpenAI is aggressively poaching Apple hardware engineers. Meanwhile, OpenAI is also shifting direction; FT reported that Altman issued an internal "Code Red" alert late last year because enterprise customers were three times more likely to choose Anthropic when first procuring AI than OpenAI. OpenAI's share of the enterprise market has dropped from 50% in 2023 to 27%. Apple acknowledges it cannot produce top-tier AI, but it intends to allow every AI to compete for the entry to 1 billion users. What OpenAI is losing is not just a partner, but an exclusive channel. (Source: Bloomberg / MacRumors / FT / Entrepreneur / TechCrunch) * * * 5|Fannie Mae Accepts Crypto-Backed Mortgages for the First Time, Bitcoin Enters Housing Credit System ------------------------------------- Coinbase and online lender Better have jointly launched the first crypto-backed mortgage product approved by Fannie Mae. Borrowers can pledge Bitcoin or USDC as collateral for the down payment while retaining ownership of the assets, avoiding taxable events triggered by sales. Interest rates are 0.5 to 1.5 percentage points higher than standard 30-year rates. A key provision is that there are no additional margin requirements, meaning a plummet in Bitcoin prices will not trigger forced liquidation; only accounts that are overdue by 60 days will enter the liquidation process. On the same day, another line is progressing in parallel. The White House has approved a review of crypto access rules for 401(k) retirement accounts, which, if ultimately lifted, will open the crypto asset door to a $10 trillion retirement market. This is not a victory party for the crypto industry; it is traditional financial infrastructure deciding to absorb crypto liquidity. When Fannie Mae's name appears on crypto products, the signal is clear: the federal housing credit system has accepted Bitcoin as an asset class. (Source: CoinDesk / Bloomberg / WSJ / Fortune) * * * 6|Shield AI Valuation Rises 140% in a Year to $12.7 Billion, Wartime Economy Reshapes Military Capital ------------------------------------------- Defense AI startup Shield AI announced it has raised $2 billion at a valuation of $12.7 billion (with $1.5 billion in equity and $500 million in preferred shares), up from a valuation of $5.3 billion a year ago. The lead investors are Advent International and JPMorgan's Strategic Investment Division. The direct reason for the valuation jump is that Shield AI's Hivemind autonomous flight system was selected for the U.S. Air Force's collaborative combat drone project, providing software for Anduril's Fury unmanned combat aircraft. On the same day, FT reported that Carlyle and KKR are building two data centers for the U.S. Army, each costing $2 billion. Traditional PE giants are treating military infrastructure as an asset class for allocation. Shield AI's valuation could not have risen 140% in peacetime. The real signal is the source of capital; it's not venture capital but institutional investors like JPMorgan and Advent betting that the wartime economy is a long-term state. (Source: TechCrunch / Reuters / Bloomberg / FT) * * * Also Worth Knowing ↓ ------- David Sacks' 130-day term as AI+Crypto Czar has expired, transitioning to Co-Chair of PCAST. The White House will no longer appoint new czars. During his tenure, Sacks pushed for the crypto executive order and Bitcoin reserve plan, but legislation on stablecoins and market structure remains unfinished. (Source: CNBC / Axios) Goldman Sachs estimates that the Iran war will eliminate 10,000 jobs monthly, hitting leisure hotels and retail hardest. Economist Pierfrancesco Mei's model shows Brent crude's average price in March was $105, and it could surge to $115 in April. Gen Z has the highest concentration in the hotel and dining industry and will be the most impacted. (Source: Fortune / Goldman Sachs) (Continued from the previous report) JPMorgan states that Bitcoin has shown safe-haven demand during the Iran war, while gold and silver have dropped due to ETF redemptions. $14 billion in Bitcoin quarterly options will expire on Friday, the largest amount this year. The traditional narrative of safe-haven assets is loosening. (Source: CoinDesk / The Block / JPMorgan) Cohere and Mistral released open-source voice models on the same day, entering a price war in the AI voice market. The Cohere model has 2 billion parameters and can run on consumer-grade GPUs. The Mistral model can run on smartwatches. ElevenLabs' paid moat is narrowing. (Source: TechCrunch / VentureBeat) The China Academy of Information and Communications Technology, together with more than 40 units, has released the first industry standard in the field of embodied intelligence, effective June 1. The standard covers benchmark testing methods and system frameworks. On the same day, Suton JuChuang announced its first quarterly profit, with annual sales of 300,000 robotic lidar units, ranking first globally. (Source: 36Kr / CCTV News) Helium shortages are beginning to impact the tech supply chain. Executives from multiple semiconductor companies confirmed the effects at CERAWeek. Helium is a key cooling material for chip manufacturing and fiber optic production, and the Iran war and Qatar's production disruptions have exacerbated supply tightness. (Source: Reuters) Click to learn about job openings at BlockBeats. **Welcome to join the official BlockBeats community:** Telegram subscription group: https://t.me/theblockbeats Telegram discussion group: https://t.me/BlockBeats_App Twitter official account: https://twitter.com/BlockBeatsAsia

Hot Posts About Advanced Micro Devices (AMD)

TopEscapeArtist

TopEscapeArtist

1 hours ago
Recent market developments are actually quite interesting. On Tuesday, U.S. stocks rebounded across the board, with the Dow, the S&P 500, and the Nasdaq all rising—especially the Nasdaq, which gained more than 1%. Several major signals behind this rebound are worth paying attention to. First is important news from the AI sector. Anthropic announced it will partner with Intapp to launch AI agent tools for professional services companies. At the same time, it is also developing a host of plugins with partners such as FactSet, deeply integrating AI capabilities into professional tools like investment banking, accounting, and legal software. This move is crucial because it sends a “collaboration rather than replacement” signal, essentially giving the market reassurance. Previously, the market had been worried that AI would upend the software industry, but now the software sector has warmed up overall. Driven by this news, Thomson Reuters’ stock price surged as much as 14.2%. In addition, Meta and AMD also made big moves. Meta plans to deploy AMD computing chips with processing power equivalent to 6 gigawatts—representing a multi-year order worth $60 billion. At the same time, it can also buy up to 160 million shares of AMD at $0.01 per share, representing 10% equity in AMD. This deal directly pushed AMD’s stock up by 8.77%. When it comes to payments, one interesting development is that Stripe is reportedly considering a full or partial acquisition of PayPal. PayPal’s stock has fallen sharply in recent years, dropping from its July 2021 record high of $308 to today’s level—down more than 85%. However, once the acquisition rumors came out, PayPal’s stock rose 6.7% on the day to $47.02. This suggests the market still looks favorably on PayPal’s future prospects in payment-related functions such as withdrawals. In commodities, gold ended its four-day winning streak. On Tuesday, it fell 1.59% to $5,142.4 per ounce. Oil also slipped slightly, down 0.32% to $66.08 per barrel. Copper, however, is holding steady. Citigroup expects the copper price to rise to $14,000 per ton over the next three months, citing still-strong buy orders at lower levels in both the physical and financial markets, along with expectations for seasonal inventory drawdown in China. In the crypto market, Bitcoin fell 1.74% over 24 hours to $76,750, while Ethereum dropped 3.03% to $2,280. On the macro front, the U.S. released new data on consumer confidence. The Conference Board’s February index reached 91.2, better than the expected 87.1, which also provides support for the stock market rebound. The VIX volatility index also fell to nearly 7%, and market risk sentiment has clearly improved. The Federal Reserve is still weighing the impact of AI on monetary policy. Governor Cook said AI may lead to an increase in the unemployment rate in the short term, while also pushing up the neutral interest rate—creating new challenges for monetary policy. Goolsbee emphasized that they cannot cut rates early just because productivity is expected to improve; they must wait until inflation truly falls. It looks like the pace of rate cuts this year will not be that fast. Bank of England Governor Bailey said a rate cut in March remains undecided and depends on new data. These cautious stances from central banks reflect the complexity of the current inflation situation. Interestingly, the U.S. is also reportedly actively seeking quotes on the yen exchange rate, preparing to work with Japan to intervene in the currency market, mainly for geopolitical and financial stability considerations. Overall, this market rebound is mainly driven by progress in AI commercialization, large corporate investments, and improving consumer confidence. However, the cautious stance of central banks and the stubbornness of inflation remain key risks to watch going forward.
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NFTArchaeologis

NFTArchaeologis

3 hours ago
Recently, I’ve noticed a fairly interesting shift in the market. On Tuesday, U.S. stocks rebounded across the board: all three major indices rose together. The Dow gained 0.76%, the S&P 500 rose 0.77%, and the Nasdaq jumped even more, up 1.04%. At the same time, however, gold fell 1.59% to $5,142.4 per ounce, and silver also ended its four-day streak of gains. The logic behind this is actually quite clear. Anthropic, an AI startup, issued a major signal—they plan to collaborate with partners such as Intapp and FactSet to launch AI agents for professional services firms, covering areas like investment banking, accounting, law, human resources, and more. The key is that they’re sending a message of “collaboration rather than replacement,” which directly alleviates the market’s concerns about AI disrupting the software industry—so the software sector overall warmed up. On the other hand, Meta and AMD also announced a large-scale partnership. Meta will deploy AMD chips with computing power equivalent to 6 gigawatts, representing a multi-year order worth about $60 billion. Such big-ticket investment in AI infrastructure has, to some extent, also boosted market risk appetite. Interestingly, the VIX fear index dropped by nearly 7%, and consumer confidence was also better than expected, coming in at 91.2. As safe-haven assets, gold and silver naturally faced pressure amid improving risk sentiment. This pullback in gold and silver, to a certain extent, reflects the market’s reassessment—and repricing—of economic prospects. From the Federal Reserve’s perspective, recent comments by several officials are also quite thought-provoking. Cook mentioned that AI could drive generational shifts in the labor market, and that short-term neutral interest rates might rise. Goolsbee emphasized that it’s still too early to cut rates based solely on expectations of productivity improvements; only when inflation truly declines would rate cuts be considered. In practice, these remarks are laying the groundwork for the subsequent policy stance. The Bank of England’s Governor Bailey also indicated that whether there will be a rate cut in March remains undecided, and monetary policy here is still on hold and under review. Geopolitically, the U.S. is also still concerned about the yen exchange rate. Reports say that in January, U.S. authorities proactively sought quotes on exchange rates and are preparing to coordinate intervention together. On the commodities front, Citi is bullish on copper and expects it to rise to $14,000 per ton in the next three months. However, gold and silver have already been under short-term pressure. Instead, it’s the AI-related chips and software companies that are seeing demand. Thomson Reuters’ stock surged 14.2% at one point on news of Anthropic’s enterprise AI tools, and AMD also closed up 8.77%. The shift in market sentiment is quite obvious—from worrying that AI will steal people’s jobs to growing optimism about the productivity gains and business opportunities that AI can bring. The weakness in gold and silver perfectly reflects this transition from defense to offense. Interestingly, reports suggest Stripe is still considering a full or partial acquisition of PayPal, and competition in the payments space is quietly changing as well. Overall, this rebound is driven by a renewed reassessment of the progress of AI commercialization and optimistic expectations for corporate earnings. The pullback in gold and silver is only a surface manifestation of this market sentiment shift; the real story is still unfolding within the AI and technology sectors.
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