By Zaheer Kachwala and Max A. Cherney
May 5 (Reuters) – Advanced Micro Devices forecast second-quarter revenue above Wall Street expectations on Tuesday, betting on resilient demand for its data-center chips as cloud providers accelerate spending on artificial-intelligence infrastructure.Â
Shares of the company jumped 5.5% in extended trading after surging about 60% so far this year.Â
The company expects quarterly revenue of $11.2 billion, plus or minus $300 million, compared with estimates of $10.52 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.Â
AMD, long seen by analysts and investors as a leading challenger to Nvidia’s dominance, is tapping in to a new AI hardware opportunity in the form of central processing units as companies move from training models to deploying them, a process known as inference.Â
The company expects adjusted gross margins of about 56% for the second quarter, compared with analyst expectations of 55.4%.
For the first quarter, adjusted for stock compensation and other items, AMD reported per-share earnings of $1.37 on revenue of $10.25 billion. Analysts expected revenue of $9.89 billion and earnings of $1.29 per share.
Earlier this year, AMD said it had agreed to sell up to $60 billion worth of artificial-intelligence chips to Meta Platforms over five years in a deal that allows the Facebook owner to purchase as much as 10% of the chip firm.
While analysts perceive AMD as best-positioned to benefit from the surging CPU demand due to market share gains and product roadmap, competition from Intel, which gave a strong revenue forecast last month, is heating up.Â
After struggling with its chip production for several quarters, Intel is now ramping up its in-house fabrication efforts to cater to growing CPU demand, posing a threat to AMD, which is beholden to extremely tight capacity at TSMC.  Â
The semiconductor industry is also grappling with a global shortage of memory chips, stemming from a rush to secure supply of high-bandwidth memory used in data centers alongside GPUs and CPUs.Â
The sharp increase in memory prices is also expected to hit demand for consumer electronics – a key market for AMD – as pricier computers are expected to turn consumers away.Â
The stock has far outperformed Nvidia’s year-to-date gain of 6% and the broader Philadelphia Semiconductor Index’s 48% rise, as of Monday’s close.Â
(Reporting by Zaheer Kachwala in Bengaluru and Max A. Cherney in San Francisco; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila and Matthew Lewis)

