Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) stock surged on strong Q4 data center revenue of $5.38B (+39% YoY) and Meta Platforms’ (META) 6GW GPU deal.
Broadcom (AVGO) shares climbed today, driven by a long-term Google TPU supply deal through 2031 and Q1 AI chip revenue of $8.40B (+106% YoY).
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The AI chip rally is proving something important this Friday afternoon: the opportunity in artificial intelligence silicon is wide enough to reward very different business models simultaneously. Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:AMD) stock is up 4% today, moving from $236.64 to $246, while Broadcom (NASDAQ:AVGO) stock is climbing 5%, rising from $354.91 to $373.
What makes this rally worth paying attention to is that AMD and Broadcom aren’t winning for the same reason. One competes head-on with NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) stock across the broad GPU and server CPU market. The other builds bespoke chips for hyperscalers that don’t want commodity silicon. Together, they illustrate that the AI buildout isn’t a winner-take-all story.
So, let’s break down what’s driving each name and what it means for investors watching the sector.
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AMD’s move today reflects sustained momentum across its two core AI growth engines: the EPYC server CPU franchise and the Instinct GPU lineup. AMD’s Instinct GPU series is competing directly with NVIDIA in the AI training and inference market, and AMD’s EPYC server CPUs are gaining meaningful market share in data center deployments.
The analyst community backs that thesis with real numbers. UBS carries a price target of $310 on AMD stock, reflecting strong confidence in the company’s growth trajectory amid rising AI demand. That target sits well above today’s trading price, giving the stock meaningful upside if the AI infrastructure cycle accelerates.
Hyperscaler validation has arrived in a big way. Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META) stock has a significant multiyear AMD GPU deal, a 6 gigawatt agreement, which is one of the clearest signals that hyperscalers are actively diversifying away from sole reliance on NVIDIA.
AMD’s most recent quarterly results reinforce the growth story. In Q4 2025, the company reported revenue of $10.27 billion, up 34% year over year, beating estimates of $9.72 billion. The Data Center segment hit a record $5.38 billion in revenue, up 39% year over year, and free cash flow reached a record $2.08 billion. CEO Lisa Su captured the momentum, stating, “We are entering 2026 with strong momentum across our business, led by accelerating adoption of our high-performance EPYC and Ryzen CPUs and the rapid scaling of our data center AI franchise.”
That said, the bear case deserves acknowledgment. U.S. export controls on MI308 GPUs to China remain a genuine headwind, and valuation concerns are real given the stock’s strong run. The stock is volatile, and investors should size positions accordingly.
Broadcom’s rally tells a structurally different story. Rather than competing in the commodity GPU market, Broadcom partners with hyperscalers to design purpose-built AI chips, called ASICs, tuned for specific workloads. Broadcom’s custom ASIC chips are more power-efficient and cost-effective for specific workloads than general-purpose GPUs, and that efficiency advantage is becoming increasingly attractive as hyperscalers scale their AI infrastructure.
The partnership news driving sentiment this week is significant. Broadcom entered into a long-term TPU and networking supply agreement with Google through 2031, and the company is also expanding its collaboration with Anthropic. Broadcom’s networking chips for Ethernet switching are also critical AI data center infrastructure, adding a second growth vector beyond custom silicon alone.
In Q1 fiscal 2026, Broadcom reported revenue of $19.31 billion, up 30% year over year, with AI chip revenue reaching $8.40 billion, up 106% year over year, above the company’s own forecast. CEO Hock Tan set an ambitious forward target: “Our AI revenue growth is accelerating, and we expect AI semiconductor revenue to be $10.7 billion in Q2.” The company also announced a new $10 billion share repurchase program through December 31, 2026.
Hedge funds have taken notice, accumulating Broadcom shares as the custom ASIC thesis gains credibility. The semiconductor industry is projected to reach $2 trillion in market size within four years, and Broadcom’s hyperscaler relationships position it to capture a disproportionate share of that growth.
AMD and Broadcom shares are rallying together today, but they’re not the same trade. AMD is a higher-beta, broader play on AI chip demand across training, inference, and server compute. In contrast, Broadcom is a more concentrated bet on the shift by hyperscalers toward custom silicon and the networking infrastructure that ties it all together. Both approaches are working right now, and the market is rewarding both.
Watch for whether today’s gains hold into the close. With both stocks carrying strong momentum and AI infrastructure spending showing no signs of slowing, the sector tailwind appears durable. The next catalyst to watch for AMD is any update on MI series GPU shipment volumes; for Broadcom, it’s the Q2 fiscal 2026 earnings report and whether AI semiconductor revenue meets the $10.7 billion guidance.
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