Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD) is heading into its first-quarter 2026 report after the close on Tuesday, May 5.
AMD stock is already acting like a winner before a single number is printed.
The stock last traded around $341.54, while consensus targets sit at $287.91, a reminder that the market may already be pricing in much of the good news.
Options traders are bracing for an about 8% move either way.
Put simply, this is not a normal earnings, it is a test of whether AMD’s recent run has room to stretch further or is already too far ahead of the story.
AMD Q1 earnings: What the Street is expecting?
Wall Street’s setup is firm as analysts are looking for roughly $9.9 billion in revenue and adjusted EPS of about $1.27 to $1.30, both up around a third from a year earlier.
The figures indicate that AMD enters the print with a beat already close to the base case, not the upside surprise.
The real issue is what management says next.
In the last quarter, AMD posted record fourth-quarter 2025 adjusted EPS of $1.53 on revenue of $10.3 billion, but the stock still sold off after management guided first-quarter revenue to about $9.8 billion and warned that the current quarter would come in sequentially lower.
AMD stock fell 8% in after-hours trading, and that guidance included about $100 million from China-bound sales, adding another layer of uncertainty.
Bull and bear cases start from the same facts
The bullish case is straightforward, as DA Davidson upgraded AMD to Buy and lifted its target to $375.
Analyst Gil Luria, cited “a structural increase in CPU demand” and saying the firm’s 2026 revenue estimate was raised by $2 billion after stronger industry data points.
Stifel also raised its target to $320.
Bulls point to AMD’s expanding AI footprint, including the February deal to supply up to six gigawatts of chips to Meta, with MI450 hardware and the Helios rack-scale platform part of that rollout.
The bear case is less about the business and more about the valuation.
HSBC downgraded AMD to Hold ahead of earnings and lifted its target to $340, warning that the stock’s sharp rally has pushed expectations too high.
The message from the skeptic camp is that AMD does not need to miss to disappoint; it only needs to be predictable.
Bob O’Donnell of TECHnalysis Research captured that mood in Reuters:
The expectations for large blowout quarters for AI-related hardware companies have skewed what the market is looking for.
Bob O’DonnellAnalyst at TECHnalysis Research
Hold, Sell, or Buy the dip?
Wall Street views are divided, largely along the lines of different investor types.
For long-term holders, holding still makes sense.
AMD’s AI partnerships with Meta and OpenAI, plus the expected MI450 and Helios ramps in the second half of 2026, keep the multi-year thesis intact even if tonight’s call is merely good rather than spectacular.
For traders, trimming or selling a piece is defensible.
The stock has surged roughly two-thirds in about a month, options are pricing an 8% swing, and the company’s last “good but not great” guide was enough to knock the shares lower after hours.
That is a real risk when expectations are this elevated.
Buying the dip is the hardest call as it only looks attractive if AMD pairs the report with a clearly stronger Q2 outlook and convincing commentary on the AI ramp.
The post AMD Q1 earnings tonight: Hold, Sell, or Buy the dip in advance? appeared first on Invezz
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