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AMD stock sends valuation signal for first time in 3 years

Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) stock just flashed a red signal investors haven’t seen in years.

For the first time in about three years, the stock’s valuation has effectively reset below recent annual figures, underscoring a clear shift in sentiment.

The semiconductor giant’s price-to-earnings ratio has slipped to about 76, per GuruFocus, behind year-end readings of 77 in 2022, 278 in 2023, 120 in 2024, and 80 in 2025. 

That obvious break in the pattern points to investors being clearly in “show-me” mode in the AI trade, even though demand has held up remarkably well.

As of March 30, 2026, AMD stock is trading around $201.99, according to Yahoo Finance.

That incredible shift comes as questions start to build around execution. 

AMD’s latest outlook pointed to $9.8 billion in first-quarter sales, suggesting a quarter-over-quarter slowdown and raising doubts about whether it could catch up with Nvidia in AI.

Speaking of Nvidia (NVDA), it has also flashed a major valuation signal I covered, trading below the S&P 500’s valuation for the first time in 13 years.

At the same time, the broader investing space is changing. 

Tech valuations have taken a major hit as investors reassess whether the relentless AI spending will manifest into durable returns. 

That has made stocks like AMD a lot more sensitive to any sign of sluggishness.

AMD stock returns vs. Nvidia

  • Over the past month, AMD returned 0.89%, while Nvidia returned -5.45%.
  • Over the past three months, AMD returned -6.05%, while Nvidia returned -12.07%.
  • Over the past six months, AMD returned 26.67%, while Nvidia returned -5.98%.
  • Over the past nine months, AMD returned 40.46%, while Nvidia returned 6.21%.
  • Year to date, AMD returned -5.68%, while Nvidia returned -10.17%.
  • Over the past year, AMD returned 89.40%, while Nvidia returned 50.37%.
  • Over the past three years, AMD returned 109.08%, while Nvidia returned 531.97%.
  • Over the past five years, AMD returned 160.94%, while Nvidia returned 1,208.04%.
    Source: Seeking Alpha

Why AMD’s valuation looks different now

AMD’s current price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio is telling a much different story about the stock, Investopedia explains.

Simply put, the ratio essentially tells how much investors are willing to pay for $1 of a company’s earnings. 

Given AMD’s current P/E ratio of around 76, that means investors are paying up $76 for every $1 AMD earns. The greater the number, the more growth and optimism the market is essentially pricing in.

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AMD’s current P/E ratio is comfortably below its 10-year median of 101.53, GuruFocus notes, and far below its year-end readings from 2022 through 2025. 

So AMD stock is trading at a much lower valuation than it did during the peak of market enthusiasm.

Still, that doesn’t automatically make the stock cheap. 

GuruFocus shows AMD’s current P/E ratio is still significantly higher than the semiconductor industry median of 39.52. In fact, its valuation ranks worse than 71.2% of 625 companies in the industry.

So AMD stock isn’t trading at its previously extreme multiple, but clearly, investors are still paying a meaningful premium for future growth.

AMD stock resets lower as valuation drops below recent annual levels for first time.

White/Getty Images for Wired

Wall Street price targets for AMD stock

  • Wall Street’s consensus price target for AMD stock is $289.61, implying +43.38% upside, with a high estimate of $365 and a low estimate of $220. 
  • Wells Fargo set a $345 target, implying about 70.8% upside.
  • UBS set a $310 target, implying about 53.5% upside.
  • Piper Sandler set a $300 target, implying about 48.5% upside.
  • Bank of America set a $280 target, implying about 38.6% upside.
  • Morgan Stanley set a $255 target, implying about 26.2% upside.
  • Goldman Sachs set a $240 target, implying about 18.8% upside.
    Sources: SeekingAlpha, Benzinga, Investing.com, Barron’s, Tipranks

AMD valuation milestones

  • AMD broke into the $100 billion club on Aug. 5, 2020, when the stock closed at $85.31, per MarketWatch.
  • By the end of 2021, AMD’s market value had surged to nearly $173.8 billion, making it a semiconductor heavyweight.
  • The next big jump came at the end of 2023, when AMD wrapped up the year with a market cap of nearly $238.2 billion, as AI enthusiasm reshaped the chip market.
  • On Feb. 29, 2024, AMD closed at above $300 billion in market value for the first time, according to Bloomberg, supercharged by an AI-fueled rally in its stock.
  • AMD then crossed the $400 billion mark for the first time on Oct. 24, 2025, MarketWatch noted, reaching $410 billion amid investor enthusiasm for its AI story. 
  • As of March 27, 2026, AMD’s market cap was about $329.33 billion, according to Yahoo Finance. 

What AMD’s chart is saying

AMD’s stock technical setup looks mostly mixed at this point. 

It currently trades slightly above its 20-day moving average of $200.92 and its 200-day moving average of $195.16, per Barchart.com. Still, it remains behind its 50-day average of $213.92 and 100-day average of $217.72.

Although the long-term trend remains intact, the stock still has a ton of work to do before there’s clarity on whether investors could say short- and medium-term momentum has really turned higher.

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The momentum signals underscore a similar story. 

AMD’s 14-day RSI is 42.2, according to Investing.com. 

The RSI is a simple metric that tells investors if a stock is overbought or oversold, and the current reading in the early 40s usually points to weak but not eroding momentum. 

Additionally, AMD’s MACD is -1.460, still leaning bearish as it compares short-term momentum with the bigger trend, underscoring the fact that the stock hasn’t fully shaken off the recent selling pressure.

That said, near-term support sits in the high-$190s, Barchart.com noted, with more substantial downside support in the mid-$190s and the low-$190s if pressure builds again.

On the upside, resistance begins in the low-$200s and strengthens as the stock rises toward the upper-$200s, just below $210. 

The more demanding ceiling sits in the low-$210s to high-$210s, where AMD will have to then reclaim its 50-day and 100-day moving averages.

Related: Morgan Stanley sends clear message on semiconductor stocks after selloff