AMD's Su explains what's behind massive forecast change as stock roars 19% on earnings

Advanced Micro Devices CEO Lisa Su stated the company’s strong first-quarter earnings were largely driven by boosted demand for central processing units.

“Agents are really driving tremendous demand in the overall AI adoption cycle,” Su remarked Wednesday. This also touches on aspects of bull market.

Su doubled her long-term forecast, expecting the server CPU economy to top $120 billion by 2030.

Advanced Micro Devices CEO Lisa Su told CNBC on Wednesday that her massive forecast revision was due to the demand surge for central processing units led by the growth of agentic artificial intelligence.

“Agents are really driving tremendous demand in the overall AI adoption cycle, and we’re very excited to be in the middle of it.” Su told CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street.”

The corporation beat analyst estimates on Tuesday for both earnings per share and revenue in the first quarter. Revenue climbed 38% year over year, with Su highlighting the company’s data center business as the primary driver.

“The main thing that I can say is that we are seeing a shifting of the workload,” Su told CNBC, adding that the demand picture became clearer over the last 90 days after talks with the company’s largest customers.

CPUs have seen a resurgence as the compute needs have shifted with the rise of agentic AI. While the corporation has trailed Nvidia in the marketplace for graphics processing units, AMD has been a leading maker of CPUs, which are needed for inference tasks.

In November, AMD forecast the server CPU economy to grow about 18% annually over the next three to five years.

On the company’s earnings call Tuesday, Su revised that estimate to exceed 35% growth each year, with the sector topping $120 billion by the end of the decade.

The insatiable demand for AI has created capacity constraints for semiconductors like Intel, Nvidia and AMD.

Despite the rapid growth, Su expects AMD to meet compute demand for its customers.

“Yes, it’s tight for sure,” Su remarked of chip supply. “When we look at it, there’s a lot of demand out there, but we have a world-class supply chain that has been building for this moment.”

Analysts reacted positively to the increased guidance.

Goldman Sachs hiked its price target from $240 to $450. The bank also changed its rating on the chipmaker from hold to procure.

— CNBC’s Kristina Partsinevelos contributed to this report.

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