Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD) stock has surged more than 130% this year, but Wall Street is still chasing the stock higher.

In June alone, Barclays, UBS, Mizuho and Bernstein all raised their price targets on the chipmaker as analysts are no longer treating AMD as just a second-place GPU challenger to Nvidia.

They are increasingly arguing that CPUs are becoming an AI story and the driver is agentic AI, or AI systems that do more than answer one prompt.

Barclays: Call that reframed the debate

Barclays was one of the first major firms to put a bigger number on the CPU opportunity.

Analyst Tom O’Malley raised his AMD price target to $665 from $500 and kept an Overweight rating.

His core argument was that “CPU-to-GPU ratios are narrowing as CPU demand reaches new levels in the rapidly expanding world of agentic AI,” adding that AMD is “best positioned to benefit from this transition”.

The CPU-to-GPU ratio simply means how many central processors are needed for every graphics processor inside AI systems.

Early AI spending was dominated by GPUs because training large models required enormous parallel computing power.

Agentic AI changes the mix because it needs more coordination, routing and software execution around those GPUs.

O’Malley’s model sees the standalone server CPU market approaching $200 billion by 2030.

UBS: Betting on the hidden CPU story

UBS pushed the argument even further.

Analyst Timothy Arcuri raised his AMD target to $670 from $455 and kept a Buy rating.

That now stands above Barclays’ $665 call and makes UBS one of the most bullish voices on the stock.

The firm said it was “incrementally more constructive” on AMD as standalone CPU racks gain traction.

In plain English, UBS thinks customers are starting to buy CPU-heavy systems for AI workloads that do not rely only on GPU clusters.

That matters because AMD’s CPU business has often been overshadowed by its Instinct GPU ramp.

Investors are watching whether AMD can become a credible second source to Nvidia in AI accelerators. UBS is saying another part of the story may be hiding in plain sight: server CPUs.

Arcuri lifted his 2030 AMD server CPU revenue forecast to $50 billion from $41 billion.

Mizuho and Bernstein: The supply-side case

Mizuho and Bernstein added a second layer to the bull case: scarcity.

Mizuho raised its AMD target to $615 from $515 and kept an Outperform rating, citing strong demand linked to agentic AI.

The firm also flagged that CPU and memory suppliers could remain supply-constrained into 2027.

That turns the story from pure demand into a supply-side argument.

If companies need more CPUs for AI workloads, and supply remains tight, pricing and revenue assumptions may have room to move higher.

Bernstein also raised its AMD target, lifting it to $600 from $525 while maintaining an Outperform rating.

The firm increased its 2030 server CPU market estimate to $223 billion from $137 billion, reflecting a much larger opportunity tied to agentic AI.

The caveat is valuation, as AMD’s average Wall Street price target still sits below where the stock recently traded, which means shares have already run ahead of broad consensus.

The next real tests are AMD’s Advancing AI event in July and Q2 earnings in early August.

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