Is AMD Stock a Buy?

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AMD (NASDAQ: AMD) was once considered a struggling underdog chipmaker that trailed behind Intel and Nvidia in the x86 CPU (central processing unit) and discrete graphics processing unit (GPU) markets, respectively. But over the past ten years, its stock soared about 5,110% as it gained ground against Intel and kept pace with Nvidia.

That rally would have turned a $20,000 investment into more than $1 million. But over the past 12 months, its stock stayed nearly flat as the sluggish growth of the PC market offset the expansion of its higher-growth data center business. Does that breather represent a golden buying opportunity for long-term investors?

An digital illustration of a semiconductor.
Image source: Getty Images.

Why did AMD outperform Intel over the past decade?

Lisa Su, who took over as AMD's CEO in 2014, turned around the chipmaker with three main strategies. First, AMD rolled out more custom accelerated processing units (APUs) which merged together CPUs and GPUs on a single die. It sold a lot of those chips to gaming console makers like Sony and Microsoft, and that growth fed the expansion of its enterprise, embedded, and semi-custom (EESC) business while generating more cash for its core CPU and GPU businesses.

Second, Su drove AMD to redesign its CPUs to address the disappointing performance of its previous generation of Bulldozer chips. Unlike Intel, which still manufactured most of its chips at its own first-party foundries, AMD outsourced the production of its most advanced chips to TSMC. That "fabless" strategy enabled AMD to pull ahead of Intel, which struggled with production issues and delays, in the "process race" to manufacture smaller, denser, and more power-efficient chips.

Lastly, AMD expanded into the data center market with its EPYC CPUs, Instinct GPUs, and programmable chips via its acquisition of Xilinx in 2022. Those moves helped AMD crack Intel's near monopoly in the data center market. All of those catalysts boosted AMD's revenue at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 17% from 2014 to 2023.

According to PassMark Software, AMD's share of the x86 CPU market grew from 23.4% to 36.4% between the fourth quarters of 2014 and 2024. Intel's share shrank from 76.6% to 61.5% during the same period.

What happened to AMD over the past year?

AMD's revenue declined in the first half of 2023 as the PC market cooled off. That slowdown occurred after it lapped the industry's pandemic-driven growth spurt and dealt with tougher macroheadwinds in the consumer and enterprise markets. Sony and Microsoft also sold fewer units of their aging gaming consoles.