Better Buy: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. vs. NVIDIA

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Graphics chip makers Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD) and NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) have delivered huge gains for shareholders in recent years as both companies benefit from major tailwinds in the gaming and data center markets. We'll review where each has been and where they are going from here to determine which stock is the better buy for long-term investors today.

A computer chip with the letters "CPU" hovering a motherboard.
A computer chip with the letters "CPU" hovering a motherboard.

IMAGE SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES.

AMD winning on all fronts

Investors are clearly pumped about AMD's future, as noted by the stock's incredible 1,110% climb over the last three years, which has brought its market cap to $24.4 billion. AMD's share of the discrete GPU market has climbed 740 basis points over the last year to 34.9% as of Q1 2018, with the balance going to NVIDIA. AMD has also been gaining share against Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) in the CPU market with its Ryzen chips.

In the second quarter, revenue grew 53% year over year, driven by strong performance across all segments. The standout was the computing and graphics segment (65% of revenue), which grew 64% year over year in the last quarter, driven by strong demand for Radeon Vega graphics cards and Ryzen processors.

The PC gaming market has exploded in popularity lately, and megapopular games like Fortnite and Playerunkown's Battlegrounds have been credited with bringing in new gamers to the market. In 2017 and Q1 2018, both AMD and NVIDIA also saw a surge in demand from cryptocurrency miners. Both trends contributed to a strong upgrade cycle for high-end GPUs.

AMD has also seen strong demand in the data center market, driven by shipments of the Vega-based Radeon Instinct MI25 GPU. To build on its momentum, the chip maker just announced a new GPU for the data center market -- the Radeon Pro V340. Data centers are also turning to AMD for its Epyc processors, which drove revenue growth of 37% year over year in the Enterprise segment.

Segment

TTM As of Q2 2018

2017

2016

2015

Computing and graphics

$3.996

$3.029

$1.967

$1.805

Enterprise, Embedded, and Sem-Custom

$2.407

$2.300

$2.305

$2.186

Total revenue

$6.403

$5.329

$4.272

$3.991

Net income

$0.315

$0.043

($0.497)

($0.660)

Data source: The company. Amounts in billions. TTM = Trailing 12-month.

As an added bonus for investors, the growing demand for high-end chips have driven up average selling prices, which has pushed up margins and allowed AMD to report its first second-quarter profit in seven years.

Looking forward, AMD is facing some near-term headwinds. Crypto demand contributed about 10% of first-quarter revenue, but has been tapering off recently. In addition, NVIDIA's announcement of its new Turing RTX GPUs featuring ray-tracing technology could shift some market share back toward NVIDIA.