AMD vs Intel: Both Are Positioned for AI Data Center Growth But There Will Be Only One Winner

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By Vandita Jadeja Published

Quick Read

  • AMD's Data Center revenue surged 57% to $5.78B, while Intel beat expectations for a sixth straight quarter despite a $3.73B GAAP loss.

  • Intel's pivot to government-backed integrated manufacturing contrasts sharply with AMD's fabless model, as both race to capture AI infrastructure spending.

  • AMD's 44% post-earnings rally reflects Meta and OpenAI GPU commitments, but Intel's 86.5% surge makes it a compelling contrarian manufacturing bet.

  • Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and AMD didn't make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.

AMD vs Intel: Both Are Positioned for AI Data Center Growth But There Will Be Only One Winner

© Advanced Micro Devices

Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:AMD | AMD Price Prediction) and Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) both reported Q1 2026 results that reframe how investors should think about the AI compute race.

AMD posted a clean acceleration story powered by its Instinct and EPYC franchises. Intel delivered a noisy but improving turnaround quarter under CEO Lip-Bu Tan, with foundry traction and a surprise non-GAAP profit. Two very different businesses. One shared customer: the AI buildout.

Instinct Carries AMD. Foundry and Xeon Steady Intel.

AMD’s quarter was a Data Center quarter. The segment delivered $5.78 billion in revenue, up 57% year over year, lifting total revenue to $10.25 billion and non-GAAP EPS to $1.37.

CEO Lisa Su called out “accelerating demand for AI infrastructure, with Data Center now the primary driver of our revenue and earnings growth”. The new Meta deal for up to 6 gigawatts of Instinct GPUs and matching 6 GW OpenAI commitment are the wins underwriting that confidence.

Intel’s mix tells a different story. Revenue reached $13.58 billion, up 7.2% YoY, with Data Center and AI up 22% and Intel Foundry up 16%. A $4.07 billion restructuring charge tied largely to Mobileye triggered a GAAP net loss of $3.73 billion, yet non-GAAP EPS landed at $0.29 against a near-zero consensus. 

An infographic titled 'AMD vs Intel The AI Compute Race: Q1 2026 Head-to-Head' is presented on a dark background. The left column, dedicated to AMD, is titled 'Fabless Sprinter: Clean Acceleration' and displays Q1 2026 revenue of $10.25B (up 37.9% YoY), 55% Non-GAAP Gross Margin, $5.78B Data Center Revenue (up 57% YoY), and $1.37 Non-GAAP EPS. A quote from Lisa Su is included. Key wins list 'Meta Deal: Up to 6 GW Instinct GPUs', 'OpenAI Commitment: 6 GW', and 'Samsung HBM4 Collaboration'. Its strategic focus is 'Pure-play Fabless Designer Riding AI Accelerator Wave'. The right column, for Intel, is titled 'Government-Backed Rebuilder: Turnaround Story' and shows Q1 2026 revenue of $13.58B (up 7.2% YoY), 41.0% Non-GAAP Gross Margin, $5.42B Foundry Revenue (up 16% YoY), and $0.29 Non-GAAP EPS (beat consensus by $0.01). A quote from Lip-Bu Tan is present. Key wins include 'U.S. CHIPS Act NVIDIA Partnership: Equity Stake' and 'Xeon 6 Host for DGX Rubin'. Its strategic focus is 'Integrated Device Manufacturer Foundry Services + Host CPU for AI'. Both columns also detail key vulnerabilities, Q2 outlooks, market reactions, and investment theses.
24/7 Wall St.
Driver AMD Intel
Main growth engine Instinct GPUs, EPYC Xeon 6, Intel Foundry
Q1 revenue growth +37.9% +7.2%
Non-GAAP gross margin 55% 41.0%

Fabless Sprinter vs. Government-Backed Rebuilder

The strategic split runs deeper than the income statement. AMD sticks to its fabless model, leaning on TSMC and partnering with Samsung on HBM4 supply for MI455X GPUs.

Intel is rebuilding as an integrated manufacturer, with a U.S. government CHIPS Act equity stake, a prior $5B NVIDIA investment, and Xeon 6 selected as host CPU for NVIDIA’s DGX Rubin NVL8. One company is selling accelerators into the AI race. The other is trying to host, package, and fabricate them.

Lens AMD Intel
Core bet MI450 and Helios racks Intel 18A and foundry services
Key vulnerability TSMC dependency, memory supply Capex burn, FCF of negative $3.87 billion

What I Want to See in Q2

AMD guided Q2 revenue to roughly $11.2 billion, implying about 46% YoY growth, with gross margin ticking to 56%. I will watch whether MI450 shipments convert the Meta and OpenAI pipeline into reported revenue.

Intel guided to $13.8 to $14.8 billion with non-GAAP EPS of $0.20. You should watch whether 18A wins enough external foundry customers to justify the spend, because the risk of a potential pause of Intel 14A on weak demand still hangs over the roadmap.

Why I Lean Toward AMD, But Find Intel Harder to Ignore

If I had to pick today, AMD fits my preference for visible growth. The 44% rally since the May 5 earnings report reflects real customer commitments, not just hope. I am wary of the valuation, and the Reddit chatter about AMD funding a customer to buy its chips deserves more scrutiny than bulls give it.

Intel is the more interesting contrarian setup. Shares are up 86.5% since April 23, yet the turnaround is one quarter old. If you want a defensive growth name with margin momentum, AMD reads cleaner. If you want optionality on a government-backed manufacturing revival, Intel earns a serious look.

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About the Author Vandita Jadeja →

Vandita Jadeja is a financial copywriter who loves to read and write about stocks. She believes in buying and holding for long term gains. Her knowledge of words and numbers helps her write clear stock analysis. She has contributed to several publications, including the Joy Wallet, Benzinga, The Motley Fool and InvestorPlace.

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