Chipmaker aims to rival Nvidia as trillion-dollar AI market expands
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) unveiled an ambitious long-term outlook, forecasting a 60% increase in data center revenue over the next three to five years, building on an estimated $16 billion base in 2025. The announcement, made during AMD’s Financial Analyst Day in New York, sparked investor enthusiasm, sending shares up more than 8% in early trading Wednesday.
CEO Lisa Su outlined the company’s strategy to capture a greater share of the rapidly growing AI computing market, projecting that the total addressable market for AI data centers will soar to $1 trillion within five years. That figure includes spending across GPUs, CPUs, and networking infrastructure — key areas where AMD aims to challenge Nvidia’s dominant position.
CFO Jean Hu added that AMD’s overall revenue is expected to climb 35% from 2025 levels of $34 billion, driven primarily by its expanding data center business. Gross margins are projected to stay between 55% and 58%, with operating margins above 35%, signaling robust profitability despite rising competition.
The company’s pipeline includes major projects such as a 6-gigawatt infrastructure deal with OpenAI and a commitment to supply 50,000 chips to Oracle starting in 2026. AMD’s upcoming MI450 and MI500 GPU series and its Helios rack-scale systems are positioned to serve hyperscalers, AI-native firms, and sovereign computing clients.
While analysts have voiced concerns about power demands and financing across the AI landscape, Su remained confident: “This is a very unique moment in AI,” she said, emphasizing that investor appetite for the technology remains strong.
With AMD’s stock up 96% year-to-date, outperforming Nvidia’s 43%, the company appears well-poised to capitalize on the global AI surge and further reshape the competitive landscape in high-performance computing.
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