AMD investors are confronting a stark divide. The stock has skidded 16% from its all-time high of €471.00 set in early June, touching €395.95 on Wednesday as a broad tech selloff swept the sector. Yet behind the red ink lies a contractual foundation that few chipmakers can match: binding agreements with OpenAI and Meta to deliver a combined 12 gigawatts of AI computing capacity — deals that could funnel as much as $100 billion into AMD’s revenue pipeline over their lifetimes.
The correction, which now stands at roughly 14% in a single week from the peak, is being dismissed by analysts as profit-taking rather than a fundamental break. The stock has more than tripled over the past twelve months from €100.58, and even after the retreat it trades 87% above its 200-day moving average of €216.26. Year-to-date gains remain a staggering 112%. Market observers point to a rotation out of technology into consumer and cyclical names, not a crisis at the chipmaker.
The real story, however, lives in the numbers that drive long-term valuation. In the first quarter of 2026, AMD posted revenue of $10.3 billion, a 38% year-over-year surge. Its data-center segment alone grew 57% to $5.8 billion, accounting for the majority of company sales for the first time. Server-processor market share climbed past 46% in Q1, fueling what CFO Jean Hu described as “the biggest change in recent months” — the rise of agentic AI, which is driving “very significant and incremental demand” for AMD’s CPU platforms. Server CPU revenue expanded more than 50% in Q1, and management expects growth to accelerate past 70% in Q2.
Behind that shift are two landmark deals. AMD and OpenAI have signed a contract for six gigawatts of AI compute capacity to be filled over multiple generations of Instinct GPUs. The first tranche, one gigawatt, will begin deployment in the second half of 2026 using the new MI450 chip. A nearly identical agreement with Meta also covers six gigawatts. Together with an earlier OpenAI pact from October 2025, AMD now has twelve gigawatts of binding GPU deployments from two of the most influential AI companies. The OpenAI contract is structured as a “compute-for-upside” model — AMD grants warrants on up to 160 million shares that only vest upon achieving specific deployment and stock-price targets.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying AMD?
The hardware that must deliver on these promises — the Instinct MI450 and the Helios rack platform (MI455X), both part of the MI400 family — is slated to ramp in the second half of 2026. CEO Lisa Su has said the Helios rack will provide up to three AI exaflops in a single chassis by Q3. Analysts project the MI400 series will generate roughly $7.2 billion in revenue this year, or about 25% of data-center sales. Total data-center revenue could reach $28.7 billion in 2026, up 73% from the prior year.
Yet the near-term risks are real and acknowledged by the company. AMD has warned that MI450 production starting in Q3 will weigh on gross margins because the new GPUs fall below the corporate average. Supply constraints remain the binding constraint: advanced-node capacity and advanced packaging, particularly at partner TSMC, are stretched thin. AMD and Broadcom together consume more than a quarter of TSMC’s advanced packaging output. Management has confirmed that supply will remain tight through the end of 2026, and further growth depends entirely on whether foundry partners can scale fast enough.
The market is giving AMD the benefit of the doubt, but with conditions. The relative strength index has cooled to 53.9 from overbought territory, and the consensus price target stands at €417.10 — only about 3% above the current level, suggesting near-term fair value. Long-term holders are watching for the next catalyst: AMD’s “Advancing AI 2026” event in San Francisco on July 23, where the company will showcase its full AI roadmap just as the MI450 ramp begins. Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon maintains a buy rating with a $525 target, and Deutsche Bank recently added to its position, now holding AMD shares worth nearly $2 billion.
For now, the stock sits in a no-man’s land between a spectacular correction and a transformation that, if executed, makes the recent selloff a footnote. The market’s message is that the supercycle thesis is intact, but the next leg higher requires proof that the gigawatt contracts can be delivered on time.
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