Advanced Micro Devices’ stock surged more than 5% on Monday as investors positioned ahead of the semiconductor company’s quarterly earnings report, due after the market closes on Tuesday.

The rally reflects growing optimism that momentum in data-centre processors and artificial intelligence chips will continue, even as the broader chip sector navigates supply constraints and uneven demand signals.

AMD shares have outperformed in recent sessions as anticipation builds around whether the company can extend a run of solid execution and market-share gains, particularly in servers.

Earnings expectations set a high bar

Wall Street is forecasting another strong quarter from AMD. Analysts expect revenue of roughly $9.67 billion for the December period, representing growth of about 27% from a year earlier.

Adjusted earnings are projected at around $1.32 per share.

Those expectations follow a robust prior quarter, when AMD beat revenue estimates by about 5.6% and reported sales of $9.25 billion.

That performance reinforced confidence in the company’s exposure to cloud and enterprise customers, even as consumer PC demand remained more mixed.

During its third-quarter earnings call, Chief Financial Officer Jean Hu said the company’s fourth-quarter revenue outlook of approximately $9.6 billion, plus or minus $300 million, excludes revenue from shipments of its Instinct MI308 accelerators to China.

That disclosure highlighted the degree to which geopolitical and regulatory factors continue to shape AMD’s near-term revenue profile, particularly in advanced AI hardware.

Analysts see upside, but limits remain

RBC Capital Markets has reiterated its Sector Perform rating and $230 price target on AMD ahead of the earnings release.

Analyst Srini Pajjuri expects the company to beat consensus estimates and raise guidance, supported by healthy server demand and continued market-share gains in central processing units.

RBC anticipates that management will reaffirm previously communicated timelines for ramping its MI455 and Helios AI accelerators.

The firm said recent concerns around wafer supply constraints and execution risks tied to rack-scale systems are unlikely to derail those plans in the near term.

At the same time, RBC noted that AMD management appears confident about securing the initial gigawatt-scale opportunity with OpenAI, which the firm believes is already embedded in its financial models.

However, RBC cautioned that additional near-term upside from AI accelerators could be constrained by supply limitations, suggesting that expectations beyond current guidance may need to be tempered.

Cantor Fitzgerald has taken a more bullish stance, reiterating its Overweight rating and $350 price target on AMD, according to a report cited by Investing.com.

The firm expects AMD to deliver a modest beat for the December quarter and raise guidance for the March period.

Cantor Fitzgerald contrasted AMD’s outlook with Intel’s recent results, noting that AMD is not facing the same wafer transition challenges in its client and server products that weighed on Intel’s guidance.

That relative positioning has helped fuel investor confidence that AMD can continue to execute smoothly while competitors navigate internal and external headwinds.

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