AMD Q2 2025 a Mixed Bag, but AI Strength Offers Hope
Revenue beats expectations, data‑center struggles cloud the picture, but new AI chips give investors something to hang their hats on
Record Revenue, Fractured Margins
In Q2 2025, AMD posted revenue of roughly $7.685 billion, up 32 % year over year and ahead of Wall Street’s $7.42 billion consensus. Net income reached $872m, or $0.54 per share.
Despite the topline win, profitability took a hit. Adjusted gross margin was 43 %, far short of the 54 % it could’ve been absent the $800 m charge tied to U.S. export restrictions on MI308 GPUs destined for China, according to AMD.
App Economy Insights@EconomyAppAgo 05, 2025$AMD AMD Q2 FY25:
• Revenue +32% Y/Y to $7.7B ($0.3B beat).
• Operating margin -2% (-6pp Y/Y).
• Non-GAAP EPS $0.48 (in-line).
• Q3 revenue +28% Y/Y to $8.7B ($0.4B beat).
Dr. Lisa Su: "We are seeing robust demand across our computing and AI product portfolio and are well… pic.twitter.com/e1q3fSM2sv
Lisa Su, AMD CEO (AMD).
“We delivered strong revenue growth in the second quarter led by record server and PC processor sales,” said Dr. Lisa Su, AMD Chair and CEO. “We are seeing robust demand across our computing and AI product portfolio and are well positioned to deliver significant growth in the second half of the year, driven by the ramp of our AMD Instinct MI350 series accelerators and ongoing EPYC and Ryzen processor share gains.”
Data‑Center Disappointment Despite AI Hype
AMD’s data‑center segment generated $3.2 b, a 14 % increase year over year, but that growth was viewed as underwhelming in context. Investors expected more, especially given artificial intelligence (AI) ramp expectations. Shares slipped around 5% after hours, perhaps pointing to disappointment that the company could not better compete with Nvidia.
Saša Marinković@SasaMarinkovicAgo 05, 2025Incredible Q2 growth - amazing results - proud to be a part of this remarkable journey! Well done team @AMD pic.twitter.com/RWaiZGfcVo
The MI308 export block to China is a major factor here. AMD estimates licensing issues could cost it up to $1.5 b in sales this year, casting a long shadow over AI‑powered data‑center growth. However, in July the company announced that the U.S. Commerce Department had given indications that the export license review had been restarted and sales could potentially go ahead in the future.
PC and Gaming Keep Things Rolling
Meanwhile, AMD’s client and gaming segments delivered stellar performance. Client revenue jumped 57 % to $2.5 b off “Zen 5” Ryzen desktop CPU demand. Gaming revenue surged 73 % to $1.1 b, thanks to Radeon GPU strength and semi‑custom wins. These gains helped buffer the damage done in margins and data‑center softness.
AI Ramp and Q3 Guidance Shine Through
Even with its AI data revenue underperforming, AMD is leaning hard on optimism around its upcoming MI350 series accelerators. The company says demand is strong, and it expects those chips to power data center expansion in H2.
For Q3, AMD is guiding revenue of about $8.7 b, plus or minus $0.3 b, which is above expectations.
Cynical Perspective: Why the Hype vs Reality Gap?
On paper AMD delivered. But investor reaction says it wasn’t enough. Profit margins were slashed, AI data‑center growth met but did not impress, and looming U.S. export controls still hang over near‑term upside. So even though EPS didn’t crater, growth expectations are showing cracks.
AMD@AMDGiu 12, 2025At AMD #AdvancingAI 2025, we shared many exciting updates on our end-to-end Al solutions, products, and ecosystem, and our vision for the future of AI.
Here are some highlights 👇 pic.twitter.com/hPxZfODZ0k
Still, AMD is doubling down on AI, with new chips, a server push through the ZT Systems acquisition and partnerships touted at its Advancing AI 2025 event. That kind of positioning appeals to the growth-seeking, risk‑tolerant crowd.
What to Watch Going Forward
- MI308licensing resolution.If U.S. approvals come through, that $800 m drag can reverse and marginscould rebound.
- MI350traction.Execution on AI chip roll‑out will make or break AMD’s next act.
- Nvidiacompetition.AMD needs to compete with Nvidia in efficiency and/or price to capture AIserver budgets.
AMD’s Q2 report is a tale of two halves, strong top‑line growth and solid PC/gaming momentum on one side, and data‑center AI struggles and margin pain on the other. The long view bets on MI350 and the AI ramp, but investors wanted more. Guidance is bullish, but execution on licensing and next‑gen chips will need to prove it.
You can read the press release covering the report, here.
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