AMD targets 80%+ data center AI revenue CAGR through 2027
AMD presented its long-term strategy at its Financial Analyst Day, projecting greater than 35% revenue compound annual growth rate (CAGR) and non-GAAP EPS exceeding $20 for the next three to five years. The strategy focuses on expanding leadership in data center and AI with new products like the Instinct MI350/MI450/MI500 series GPUs and next-generation EPYC CPUs, aiming for over 80% revenue CAGR in data center AI. AMD also detailed plans to achieve more than 50% server CPU revenue market share and extend its AI PC portfolio and adaptive computing offerings.
Key Takeaways
- AMD projected more than 35% companywide revenue CAGR, non-GAAP operating margin above 35%, and non-GAAP EPS exceeding $20 over the next three to five years.
- Data center AI revenue is expected to grow at more than 80% CAGR, driven by Instinct MI350, MI450, and MI500 products and systems.
- AMD said the MI350 Series is already deployed at scale by Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, while MI450-based Helios systems are slated for Q3 2026 and MI500 for 2027.
- The company expects to exceed 50% server CPU revenue market share as it extends the EPYC portfolio and launches Venice CPUs.
- ROCm software downloads increased 10x year-over-year, and AMD said its AI PC portfolio has expanded 2.5x since 2024 to more than 250 Ryzen platforms.
Why It Matters
AMD is putting hard targets around its AI and server roadmap, with over 80% data center AI revenue CAGR and more than 50% server CPU revenue share as explicit goals. That matters because it ties product cadence — MI350 now at OCI, MI450 in Q3 2026, MI500 in 2027 — to a financial model built for margin expansion and EPS above $20. For the broader compute stack, AMD is signaling that CPUs, networking, and ROCm are part of the same platform push. Watch the MI450 Helios launch timing in Q3 2026 and whether AMD can sustain its 10x ROCm download growth.
Read full article at ir.amd.com