
Stock Prices Lead: CPU Sector Takes Over AI Hardware Trend
As the market extends the "AI hardware boom" from memory chips to server CPUs, chip stocks have surged ahead of earnings reports: AMD closed up nearly 8% on Wednesday, marking its seventh consecutive day of gains, the longest in nearly a year; Intel surged 11.7% the same day, closing at $54.25, the highest since January 2022, with a year-to-date increase of 47%.
This "rise before earnings" structure indicates that the market is factoring in two main points: the demand strength of data center CPUs and the pricing power under tight supply.
Changing Logic: AI Shifts from "Computing Power Acceleration" to "General Computing Expansion"
Recently, AI hardware narratives have focused more on GPUs and storage; however, as applications progress from simple dialogues to capable, executable "AI agents," the demand for general computing resources is also rising, boosting the importance of CPUs.
For investors, this shifts the focus from "single-chip shortages" to "system-level computing configurations": whether server CPUs will become a new bottleneck and whether manufacturers can convert tight supply into improved pricing and gross margins.
Supply, Demand, and Pricing: Cloud Providers Secure Orders, Price Increase Expectations Rise
Research from multiple institutions describes "tight supply" clearly: some investment bank studies suggest that hyperscale cloud service providers are pre-securing capacity, with Intel and AMD's server CPU capacities for 2026 nearly fully booked and discussions of raising server CPU prices by 10%—15% are underway.
From product and timing perspectives, the market is also betting on the validation window brought by "new platform scaling": on AMD's side, some analysts link demand strength with the new generation of data center CPUs (such as the Turin platform); for Intel, investors expect new server CPU products and subsequent client platform developments to further support its "fundamental recovery" narrative.
Earnings Report Tests: Intel Reports First, AMD Follows
According to the schedule, Intel will release its Q4 2025 and full-year earnings after the U.S. stock market closes on January 22, while AMD is set to disclose its Q4 and full-year results after market close on February 3.
These earnings reports often affect short-term pricing, not just by "meeting targets," but through three types of information:
- Data Center CPU Orders and Shipments: whether demand continues and if there is still a supply shortage;
- ASP and Gross Margin Clues: whether pricing rumors are confirmed by management's statements, guidance, or structural improvements;
- Intel's Manufacturing and Customer Progress: whether marginal changes in processes and foundry business continue to improve market expectations.
It is worth noting that the derivatives market is preparing for "increased volatility": reports suggest that options pricing implies a potential 8% directional weekly stock price fluctuation after Intel's earnings.
Market Guidance: The Higher the Expectations, the More Critical the Validation
Based on stock performance, the market has already factored in the "CPU relay AI hardware trend" into the price. In the next two weeks, earnings and guidance will determine whether this rally is confirmed by results or if it retreats under high expectations.





