Strong data center growth and upbeat guidance fail to satisfy investors wary of valuation and competition
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) delivered a strong fourth-quarter earnings report on Tuesday, topping Wall Street expectations on both revenue and profit and offering a better-than-anticipated outlook for the first quarter. Yet despite the solid performance, AMD shares fell sharply, underscoring how elevated expectations around artificial intelligence continue to shape investor reactions.
AMD reported earnings per share of $1.53 on revenue of $10.3 billion, well ahead of Bloomberg consensus estimates calling for EPS of $1.32 on $9.6 billion in revenue. The results marked a sharp improvement from the $7.7 billion the company posted in the same quarter last year, reflecting continued momentum across its core businesses.
Looking ahead, AMD forecast first-quarter revenue between $9.5 billion and $10.1 billion, exceeding the Street’s $9.4 billion estimate, though some investors had hoped for guidance above $10 billion. That nuance appeared to weigh on the stock, even as fundamentals remained strong.
The standout performer was AMD’s data center segment, where revenue reached $5.4 billion, comfortably above expectations of $4.97 billion. The result reinforced AMD’s growing role in AI infrastructure, even as the market debates whether the current pace of spending is sustainable. Over the past year, AMD shares are still up more than 110%, trailing only rival Nvidia in the AI chip race.
Elsewhere, AMD’s client business posted revenue of $3.1 billion, beating forecasts, while gaming revenue came in slightly below expectations at $843 million. Both segments face pressure from a global memory shortage that could push PC prices higher and dampen demand, a challenge AMD shares with Intel.
The earnings arrive roughly a month after CEO Lisa Su unveiled a slate of new AI-focused products at CES 2026, including the Helios rack-scale server and the upcoming MI500 GPU series, which AMD claims will dramatically boost AI performance. Still, competition is intensifying—not just from Nvidia, but also from major customers such as Microsoft, Amazon, and Google, all of which are developing their own in-house chips.
For AMD, the quarter confirmed strong execution. For investors, it highlighted just how high the bar has become in the AI-driven semiconductor boom.
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