TLDR Krane Funds Advisors increased its position in AMD by 72.7% during the fourth quarter, now holding 11,306 shares valued at approximately $2.42 million. The chipmaker delivered first-quar
TLDR
- Krane Funds Advisors increased its position in AMD by 72.7% during the fourth quarter, now holding 11,306 shares valued at approximately $2.42 million.
- The chipmaker delivered first-quarter earnings of $1.37 per share, surpassing Wall Street expectations by $0.08, while revenue climbed 37.8% year-over-year to $10.25 billion.
- Goldman Sachs shifted its stance on AMD from Neutral to Buy, increasing its price target from $240 to $450; TD Cowen pushed its target even higher to $600.
- Shares opened at $466.38, significantly exceeding the 50-day moving average of $358.36, while the consensus price target stands at $419.86.
- Company insiders offloaded $119.5 million in shares during the last 90 days, while semiconductor stocks faced headwinds following Broadcom’s disappointing AI forecast.
Advanced Micro Devices has emerged as one of the semiconductor industry’s most compelling narratives in recent months. A combination of impressive quarterly results, multiple analyst endorsements, and heightened institutional participation has propelled the stock significantly beyond its recent trading ranges — despite encountering some volatility.
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., AMD
Shares began trading Monday at $466.38, representing a substantial premium over the 50-day moving average of $358.36 and significantly above the 200-day moving average of $265.16. With a 52-week trading band stretching from $115.06 to $546.44, the stock’s trajectory has been nothing short of dramatic.
The primary driver behind this recent optimism was AMD’s first-quarter financial performance. The semiconductor company reported earnings of $1.37 per share, exceeding the Street’s $1.29 consensus. Revenue reached $10.25 billion, topping expectations of $9.90 billion and marking a 37.8% increase compared to the prior-year period.
Such outperformance typically captures the attention of Wall Street analysts.
Wave of Analyst Endorsements
Goldman Sachs elevated AMD from Neutral to Buy on May 6th, simultaneously raising its price objective from $240 to $450. Sanford C. Bernstein followed suit, upgrading shares from Market Perform to Outperform while boosting its target from $265 to $525.
TD Cowen took the most aggressive stance, elevating its price target to $600 on June 1st while reaffirming a Buy recommendation. JPMorgan maintained its Neutral position but still increased its target from $270 to $385. Barclays established a $665 price objective, citing accelerating CPU demand driven by expanding artificial intelligence workloads.
The prevailing analyst consensus is Moderate Buy, with a mean price target of $419.86. Notably, this figure trails the current trading price, suggesting the recent rally has outpaced Street expectations.
Krane Funds Advisors was among the institutional players expanding their AMD holdings in the fourth quarter, increasing its stake by 72.7% to 11,306 shares worth approximately $2.42 million. Vanguard stands as the largest institutional stakeholder with more than 158 million shares valued at roughly $33.9 billion. Norges Bank established a fresh position worth about $4.9 billion during Q4.
Institutional investors and hedge funds collectively control 71.34% of AMD’s outstanding equity.
Executive Selling and Market Challenges
Not all signals point upward. Company executives have divested $119.5 million worth of AMD shares over the past three months. EVP Paul Darren Grasby disposed of 24,376 shares at $444.39 apiece on May 8th. EVP Mark D. Papermaster sold 31,320 shares at $350.00 on April 24th through a prearranged 10b5-1 plan.
From a broader market perspective, AMD experienced pressure following Broadcom’s quarterly results, which underwhelmed investors expecting more robust AI-related guidance. This development weighed on chip stocks across the board and renewed valuation debates surrounding AMD, particularly given its price-to-earnings multiple of 152.91.
TSMC has indicated that artificial intelligence chip supply constraints will persist for years, supporting demand fundamentals while highlighting ongoing capacity limitations throughout the industry.
Wall Street analysts currently forecast AMD will deliver $6.20 in earnings per share for the complete fiscal year.
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