Strong demand for AI processors and a higher Wall Street price target send semiconductor giant to new highs.
Shares of Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) surged Tuesday after receiving a major vote of confidence from Wall Street, as investors continued to pile into artificial intelligence-related semiconductor stocks.
The rally was fueled by Wells Fargo, which raised its price target on AMD to $615 from $505 while maintaining its Overweight rating. The investment firm cited accelerating demand for AMD’s AI-optimized server processors and growing confidence in the company’s long-term expansion across enterprise and cloud computing markets.
Analysts believe AMD is becoming one of the biggest beneficiaries of the AI infrastructure buildout, particularly as businesses invest heavily in next-generation data centers capable of supporting increasingly complex artificial intelligence workloads. Wells Fargo expects AMD’s server CPU revenue to climb 68% to approximately $16 billion in 2026, followed by annual growth of 22% to 28% through 2028. The firm pointed to enterprise modernization, cloud adoption, and the rapid emergence of agentic AI applications as key drivers of future demand.
The bullish outlook helped push AMD shares to fresh record highs, lifting the company’s market capitalization above $900 billion for the first time. The gains also contributed to a broader rally across semiconductor stocks, reflecting continued investor enthusiasm for companies positioned to capitalize on the global AI boom.
The latest optimism follows a series of strong financial results from AMD, with its data center business continuing to deliver robust growth driven by demand for EPYC processors and Instinct AI accelerators. Investors remain increasingly confident that AMD is strengthening its competitive position in AI computing while capturing a larger share of the rapidly expanding data center market.
As AI investment continues to accelerate worldwide, many analysts believe AMD remains one of the sector’s most compelling long-term growth stories.









