2 Very Big Numbers AMD Stock Investors Need to Watch on Oct. 29

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Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) is the leading supplier of graphics processing chips (GPUs) for the data center, which developers use to train and inference artificial intelligence (AI) models. The company's CEO, Jensen Huang, believes data center operators will spend $1 trillion building AI infrastructure over the next five years, so it's an incredibly valuable opportunity.

Nvidia had an estimated 98% share in the market for data center GPUs last year, but competition is ramping up, and Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD) might be one of the company's biggest threats.

AMD is becoming a multifaceted AI chip company

AMD's chips power some of the world's most popular consumer electronics, from Sony's PlayStation 5 to the infotainment systems in Tesla's electric vehicles. AMD's GPUs, CPUs (central processing units), and NPUs (neural processing units) are also extremely popular with manufacturers of personal computers.

In fact, the company's latest Ryzen AI 300 series NPUs are set to power more than 100 computing platforms from manufacturers like Microsoft, Asus, Lenovo, and HP. Ryzen AI chips were designed to process AI workloads on-device, which reduces the reliance on external data centers to create a faster user experience.

But as mentioned at the top, AMD is quickly catching up to Nvidia in the market for data center GPUs. AMD is scheduled to report its financial results for the third quarter of 2024 (ended Sept. 30) on Oct. 29. Here are two numbers related to that segment that investors need to watch.

A digital rendering of a circuit board with a chip in the center, with AI inscribed on it.
Image source: Getty Images.

The first number to watch: Data center revenue

AMD started shipping its MI300X data center GPU, which competes directly with Nvidia's flagship H100, at the end of last year. It has attracted a few of Nvidia's biggest customers already, including Microsoft, Oracle, and Meta Platforms, and some of them are yielding performance and cost advantages by using the MI300X compared to the H100.

The MI300 series generated $1 billion in sales within two quarters of its launch, making it the fastest-ramping product in AMD's history. Naturally, AI GPUs will be the driving force behind the company's data center revenue going forward.

During the first quarter of 2024 (ended March 30), AMD generated $2.3 billion in data center revenue, which was an 80% increase from the year-ago period. Then, during the second quarter (ended June 29), the company delivered $2.8 billion in data center sales, a whopping 114% year-over-year jump.

Simply put, AMD's data center revenue is accelerating, and investors should look for that trend to continue in Q3. If it does, it would be a very positive sign that the MI300 is taking market share. Since the data center segment now accounts for almost half of the company's total revenue, it's going to be the center of attention in the upcoming Q3 report.