AMD/Intel New High Again! CPU & Memory Surges: Which Side Do You Pick?

$Advanced Micro Devices(AMD)$ surged +16.5% after-hours to above $400. $INTC$ jumped +17.6% yesterday. Same week: $SanDisk Corp.(SNDK)$ printed 78.4% gross margins, and $Micron Technology(MU)$ 's CEO called memory a "strategic asset for AI." Two AI infrastructure plays are flying simultaneously — CPUs and memory. Which one runs further?

1. CPU Story: Demand Is Structurally Shifting

AI has moved from training to inference + agentic AI. That shift benefits more than just GPUs.

$AMD$ Q1 Data Center: $5.8B (+48% YoY). Q2 guidance: $11.2B revenue (+46% YoY). Lisa Su was explicit: inference and agentic AI demand for high-performance CPUs and accelerators is "accelerating." EPYC keeps taking share. MI455X ramp starts in 2H.

$Intel(INTC)$ CEO Lip-Bu Tan on his call: AI is moving from foundation models to agents and inference — data center CPU demand is surging. INTC +17.6% in a single day, up +69% from its $67 low.

2. Memory Story: Supply Constraints Are Harder to Fix Than Algorithms

$MU$ CEO Sanjay Mehrotra: memory has become a "strategic asset for unlocking AI's potential." DRAM supply/demand gap is currently 10% and widening:

- Intel's new AI CPUs carry 400GB of general DRAM (4x standard)

- Samsung on its call: customers are already pre-booking 2027 capacity, and the 2027 gap looks larger than 2026

- Meaningful new supply: earliest relief is 2028

$SanDisk Corp.(SNDK)$ this quarter: revenue +217% YoY, gross margin 78.4%, Q2 guided at 80%. wdc Q2 EPS guidance +17% above Street.

Which Side Are You On?

What do you think AMD's fair value is in the inference AI era?

CPU or memory — bigger upside from here?

Or is it effectively the same trade: more AI capex = both go up?

Leave your comments to win tiger coins~

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  • Lanceljx
    ·05-06 23:19
    TOP
    Advanced Micro Devices in the inference AI era is no longer just a GPU story. It is positioned across CPU + GPU + adaptive compute, which gives it broader exposure.

    My fair value view:
    • Base: US$450 to US$520
    • Bull: US$575+ if MI-series inference demand scales hard
    • Bear: US$320 to US$360 on valuation reset

    CPU or memory?
    Near term: Memory has bigger upside, driven by HBM shortages and pricing power.

    Medium term: CPU may quietly compound better, because inference needs orchestration, data movement and efficient serving, not just accelerators.

    My view:
    Memory = faster upside
    CPU = steadier upside
    AMD = sweet spot, as it benefits from both.

    Bottom line: More AI capex likely lifts both, but memory runs hotter while CPU runs longer.

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  • icycrystal
    ·05-06 23:41
    TOP
    In the current "inference AI era" (as of May 2026), AMD’s fair value is a moving target that the market is aggressively re-rating. Following a stellar Q1 2026 earnings beat, the stock has surged to all-time highs, reflecting a shift from viewing AMD as a "cyclical CPU play" to a "structural AI infrastructure leader.

    Prior to the recent surge, many "most followed" models anchored fair value closer to $300, suggesting the current price includes a significant momentum premium.
    AMD’s "bigger upside" actually comes from HBM (High Bandwidth Memory) integration. The MI455X and upcoming Helios stacks leverage massive memory advantages to handle larger models than competitors, making memory a core part of the GPU’s value proposition rather than a separate trade.
    The "differentiation" only matters if CapEx slows; in that scenario, CPU demand might stay more resilient (due to general-purpose cloud needs), while expensive AI GPU orders would be the first to be cut.

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  • Shyon
    ·05-06 21:46
    TOP
    I lean slightly toward memory in the near term because pricing power is stronger. When $SanDisk Corp.(SNDK)$ is guiding ~80% gross margins and $Micron Technology(MU)$ calls memory a “strategic asset,” it signals real scarcity. Supply takes years to add, and with customers already booking out capacity, the upside feels more immediate.

    That said, the CPU story is very real. $Advanced Micro Devices(AMD)$ is benefiting from the shift to inference and agentic AI, where CPUs regain importance. Even Intel seeing demand recovery confirms this isn’t a one-player trade.

    So to me, memory is a tight supply trade, while CPUs are a demand growth trade. Short term I favor memory, but longer term AMD likely compounds better as inference scales. Positioning-wise, I’d rather hold both but tilt slightly toward memory for now.

    @TigerClub @TigerStars @Tiger_comments

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  • TimothyX
    ·05-06 19:06
    TOP
    $Intel(INTC)$ CEO Lip-Bu Tan on his call: AI is moving from foundation models to agents and inference — data center CPU demand is surging. INTC +17.6% in a single day, up +69% from its $67 low.
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  • Cadi Poon
    ·05-06 19:06
    TOP
    AI has moved from training to inference + agentic AI. That shift benefits more than just GPUs.

    $AMD$ Q1 Data Center: $5.8B (+48% YoY). Q2 guidance: $11.2B revenue (+46% YoY). Lisa Su was explicit: inference and agentic AI demand for high-performance CPUs and accelerators is "accelerating." EPYC keeps taking share. MI455X ramp starts in 2H.

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  • Distinct Trade DynamicsWhile both benefit from AI Capex, they are not the same trade. The CPU/GPU trade is about "market share and software stickiness," representing a long-term structural bet on AI platform dominance. In contrast, the memory trade is a "cyclical commodity play" driven by supply-demand imbalances. If AI Capex slows, memory prices will crash much faster than CPU prices, making memory a higher-reward but higher-risk tactical play.
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  • Memory Offers Higher UpsideMemory has a bigger upside than CPUs from this point forward. While CPUs are essential, the shift to AI inference creates an insatiable demand for "High Bandwidth Memory" (HBM) and DDR5, which are currently facing severe supply constraints. This scarcity allows memory manufacturers to command record-high margins, often outpacing the incremental growth of the processor market in the short-to-medium term.
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  • AMD Fair Value in the Inference EraAMD’s fair value is currently pegged between "450" and "500" per share. This valuation assumes AMD successfully captures 25% to 30% of the AI accelerator market while maintaining its dominance in the high-margin server CPU space. As AI shifts from training to inference, AMD’s competitive pricing and "open ecosystem" software approach make it the primary alternative to Nvidia, justifying a premium forward P/E multiple.
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  • Mkoh
    ·08:16
    I'm on AMD's side
    for sustained upside better execution in AI GPUs/CPUs, higher growth visibility, and market share gains vs. Intel's recovery risks. Intel's rally is impressive but more valuation-sensitive. Watch margins and AI spend.

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  • Chrishust
    ·02:30
    Intel
    1. AMD is currently trading in the range 200 to 300 with a fair value of 280
    2. Memory has larger supply constraints than cpu in the short term
    3. More ai capex increases demand for memory over cpus which have greater supply
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  • 北极篂
    ·05-06 19:35
    所以与其纠结选边,不如承认一个现实:
    这一轮赚大钱的,不是选对赛道的人,而是能在高波动里“拿得住”的人。
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  • 北极篂
    ·05-06 19:35
    但更真实的答案是——这本来就是“一笔交易”。只要AI资本开支继续扩张(云厂还在砸钱),算力+存力一定是同步增长。
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  • 北极篂
    ·05-06 19:35
    所以如果一定要选“谁跑得更远”,我会偏向内存。原因很简单:
    CPU拼的是技术和竞争格局,变量多;
    内存拼的是供需缺口,一旦锁住,爆发力更直接。
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  • 北极篂
    ·05-06 19:34
    再看内存这边,逻辑反而更“硬”。美光科技讲得很直白:内存是AI的战略资产。现在的问题不是需求,而是供给——HBM、DRAM扩产慢、良率难,这种缺口一旦形成,价格和利润都会被锁住。闪迪78%毛利,其实已经说明这不是普通周期,而是“供给受限的超级周期”。
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  • 北极篂
    ·05-06 19:34
    超微半导体公司这波冲到400上方,本质是“推理时代红利”。当AI从训练转向推理+Agent,CPU重新变成核心调度中枢,加上EPYC持续抢份额,它吃到的是“需求结构改变”的红利。而英特尔的大涨,则更多是“预期修复+转型故事”,确定性略低,但弹性更大。
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  • highhand
    ·05-06 19:13
    CPU more upside. AMD got more legs to run... but to be safe buy both. allocate higher to the side you feel more confident. no one knows the future so don't all in
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  • AliceSam
    ·07:25
    AMD吧
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  • AN88
    ·05:23
    both go up
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  • james744
    ·05-06 23:18
    Great article, would you like to share it?
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