AI, AMD and New Chips
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But it's also beneficial to find growth stocks benefiting from catalysts that could send their shares higher in the near term. Shares of AMD have soared 61% since hitting a 52-week low of $76.48 in April.
AMD’s hardware teams have tried to redefine AI inferencing with powerful chips like the Ryzen AI Max and Threadripper. But in software, the company has been largely absent where PCs are concerned. That’s changing,
AMD's new Instinct AI GPUs will reportedly deliver between $10 billion and $12 billion of revenue in 2026 says Wall Street analysts.
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) has faced its share of volatility, with the stock down 23% over the past year. However, recent momentum suggests a potential turnaround is underway. Multiple growth catalysts are driving revenue higher,
Advanced Micro Devices’ server CPU momentum, not AI, is the real catalyst as it gains share against Intel. Learn why AMD stock is upgraded to strong buy.
AMD’s latest press conference highlighted a family of new GPUs and software that target artificial-intelligence (AI) applications. These tools compete with NVIDIA and Intel as well as other AI-focused hardware vendors.
AMD has launched the Helios AI server platform to compete with Nvidia, featuring the MI350 and MI400 series chips. Key elements of the system will be openly available, contrasting Nvidia’s closed technology.
Semiconductor giant AMD acquired Brium, a stealth startup that helps optimize AI software for different hardware infrastructure.
AMD issued a raft of news at their Advancing AI 2025 event this week, an update on the company’s response to NVIDIA's 90-plus percent market share - Read more from Inside HPC & AI News.