Few stocks have captured the Artificial Intelligence (AI) moment quite like Advanced Micro Devices.
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD) has climbed 59% year to date, and the one year return stands at 245%, according to Yahoo Finance. Those numbers reflect a market that has decided AMD is no longer a distant second in the AI chip race. It is a genuine force reshaping the data center landscape.
Morgan Stanley is paying attention. The bank raised its price target on AMD to $360 from $255, part of a broader round of semiconductor upgrades during earnings season. The call lands on the eve of AMD’s first quarter 2026 earnings report on May 5 after market close, setting up one of the most closely watched prints in the tech sector this year.
This is the moment when the AI hardware story either accelerates or shows its first cracks.
Toward the end of April 2026, AMD CEO Lisa Su met with U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick to discuss artificial intelligence and U.S. technological leadership.
That conversation underscores just how central AMD has become to the national AI conversation.
Morgan Stanley raised AMD price target to $360 in broad semiconductor upgrade
Morgan Stanley’s AMD upgrade didn’t arrive alone. The bank also raised its targets on GlobalFoundries to $58 from $47, IonQ to $47 from $38, Microchip Technology to $92 from $69, and Navitas to $12.50 from $4.50, according to Seeking Alpha.
The upgrades reflect what Morgan Stanley sees as a market continuing to strengthen broadly. For AMD specifically, the $360 target represents a 41% increase from the prior $255 figure. That’s actually a massive revision that signals real conviction, not a routine mark-to-market adjustment.
Related: Stifel resets AMD price target for rest of 2026
The bull case centers on AMD’s data center momentum. Wall Street is modeling approximately $5.6 billion in data center revenue for the first quarter of 2026, Yahoo Finance confirms. That would represent 52% year-over-year growth. The Instinct MI series of AI GPUs is at the heart of that projection, with major hyperscalers deploying AMD accelerators at scale.
AMD also has a significant server CPU story running in parallel. The EPYC processor line continues to take share in data center workloads. That revenue stream is less volatile than GPU demand and provides a durable earnings foundation beneath the flashier AI hardware narrative.
What Wall Street expects from AMD’s Q1 2026 earnings
The expectations heading into the print are substantial. According to analyst consensus, Q1 2026 projections include: