Bernstein's Stacy Rasgon now expects AMD to reach $20 in earnings by 2028, pulling its 2030 target forward two years on surging server CPU market share.
Bernstein's Stacy Rasgon now expects AMD to reach $20 in earnings by 2028, pulling its 2030 target forward two years on surging server CPU market share.

AMD's server CPU market share gains have been so rapid that Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon now projects the chipmaker hitting $20 in earnings by 2028 — two years ahead of its own 2030 target.
"I'm looking at 2028 and I'm pretty close to $20 in earnings, which was their 2030 target," Rasgon, a longtime AMD skeptic who recently upgraded the stock, said on a recent episode of The Real Eisman Playbook.
The upgrade hinges on server central processing units. Rasgon raised his growth estimate for AMD's server CPU business from 50% to 70% or more this year. AMD has captured low-to-mid 40s of x86 server processor share from essentially zero, while Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) has slid to the 60s. Chief Executive Officer Lisa Su doubled her 2030 total addressable market estimate for server CPUs to $120 billion from $60 billion.
AMD shares trade at 67 times forward earnings after surging 129% year to date and 322% over the trailing year, closing at $490.40 on June 8. If Rasgon's $20-by-2028 path holds, that multiple compresses rapidly. But the graphics processing unit business — the primary driver of the stock's AI narrative — remains a work in progress, with AMD moving from roughly 4% market share to a potential 10% to 11% in a market projected to exceed $1 trillion.
The CPU Engine Is Outperforming
The financials already reflect the shift. Q1 fiscal 2026 revenue hit $10.253 billion, with Data Center revenue at $5.775 billion, up 57% year over year. Non-GAAP earnings per share came in at $1.37, beating consensus by roughly 6%, according to the company's 8-K filing. Free cash flow more than tripled to $2.6 billion. Guidance for the second quarter calls for roughly $11.2 billion in revenue, implying about 46% year-over-year growth.
"We delivered an outstanding first quarter, driven by accelerating demand for AI infrastructure, with Data Center now the primary driver of our revenue and earnings growth," Su said on the earnings call.
The server CPU share gains have a bigger total addressable market to attack. Su's revised estimate of $120 billion for server CPUs by 2030, double her prior forecast, reflects the expanding role of processors in AI inference workloads — where AMD's EPYC chips compete directly with Intel's Xeon line.
The GPU Caveat: Warrants and Software Gaps
To land marquee GPU deals, AMD had to give away equity. Rasgon said the company issued warrants representing roughly 10% each to Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META) and OpenAI to secure their commitments, including OpenAI's 6-gigawatt partnership and Meta's matching deployment of MI450 accelerators.
"I would rather see them sign big deals without having to sign the warrants, but I understand the warrants," Rasgon said. The reasoning: "The products as they stand today are not good enough yet," so AMD traded equity for the scale needed to build out its ROCm developer ecosystem and challenge NVIDIA's (NASDAQ:NVDA) CUDA dominance.
Rasgon described AMD's GPU trajectory as moving "from being a marginal player to a slightly less marginal player" — from roughly 4% to potentially 10% to 11% market share. The company has also secured a deal to supply 50,000 GPUs to Oracle Cloud in the third quarter of 2026.
Risks Remain on the Horizon
Export controls on Instinct MI308 GPUs bound for China generated roughly $440 million in net charges in fiscal 2025, and that geopolitical risk persists. The stock's beta of 2.49 means it moves violently in both directions. Sentiment momentum has softened, with a 30-day composite sentiment decline of 9.14 points, according to data cited by 24/7 Wall St.
Wall Street remains broadly bullish: 36 buy ratings, 5 strong buys, 10 holds, and zero sells, with an average price target of $482.69 — a level the stock has already surpassed. The analyst consensus, in other words, has been overtaken by events.
For investors, the key question is whether the CPU story alone can sustain the valuation. Rasgon's answer is yes — the server CPU business is now a standalone bull case strong enough to hit a 2030 target two years early, with GPUs as upside optionality. That is a meaningfully different investment thesis than the one the market was debating in 2024.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.