The Investor
14 Jul 2026, 18:19
AMD Stock Rises 3.8% as China AI Chip Approval News and Analyst Price Target Increases Lift Sentiment
Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD) shares climbed 3.8% on Tuesday after receiving fresh support from Wall Street analysts and a Reuters report that another Chinese company has obtained U.S. approval to purchase AMD's advanced AI chips.
Bank of America raised its price target on AMD to $620 from $550 while maintaining a Buy rating. Meanwhile, KeyBanc increased its target price to $725 from $530 and reiterated its Overweight rating, reflecting growing confidence in AMD's long-term AI growth prospects.
According to Reuters, the U.S. government approved Zhuhai Hengqin Yunxiang Zhisheng Network Technology to purchase certain AMD AI accelerators that compete with Nvidia's H200 chips. The report added that ZTE Kangxun Telecom and server maker Maginfra also received approval to purchase Nvidia's H200 processors. These approvals follow similar authorizations granted in May to major Chinese technology companies, including Alibaba, Tencent, ByteDance, and JD*com, suggesting Washington may be selectively easing restrictions on advanced AI chip exports to China.
The Reuters report was viewed as a positive development for AMD, as China remains an important long-term market for AI infrastructure despite ongoing export controls. The latest approvals could allow AMD to capture additional demand from Chinese cloud providers and enterprise customers while expanding its presence in one of the world's largest AI markets.
The broader semiconductor sector also traded higher, supported by expectations of sustained AI infrastructure spending and easing inflation data that reinforced hopes for lower U.S. interest rates. The combination of improving policy developments, stronger access to the Chinese market, and renewed analyst optimism helped lift AMD shares alongside other AI chipmakers.
Investors will continue watching for further developments in U.S. export policy, enterprise AI spending trends, and AMD's execution in the increasingly competitive AI accelerator market, where it continues to challenge Nvidia for market share.
Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD) shares climbed 3.8% on Tuesday after receiving fresh support from Wall Street analysts and a Reuters report that another Chinese company has obtained U.S. approval to purchase AMD's advanced AI chips.
Bank of America raised its price target on AMD to $620 from $550 while maintaining a Buy rating. Meanwhile, KeyBanc increased its target price to $725 from $530 and reiterated its Overweight rating, reflecting growing confidence in AMD's long-term AI growth prospects.
According to Reuters, the U.S. government approved Zhuhai Hengqin Yunxiang Zhisheng Network Technology to purchase certain AMD AI accelerators that compete with Nvidia's H200 chips. The report added that ZTE Kangxun Telecom and server maker Maginfra also received approval to purchase Nvidia's H200 processors. These approvals follow similar authorizations granted in May to major Chinese technology companies, including Alibaba, Tencent, ByteDance, and JD*com, suggesting Washington may be selectively easing restrictions on advanced AI chip exports to China.
The Reuters report was viewed as a positive development for AMD, as China remains an important long-term market for AI infrastructure despite ongoing export controls. The latest approvals could allow AMD to capture additional demand from Chinese cloud providers and enterprise customers while expanding its presence in one of the world's largest AI markets.
The broader semiconductor sector also traded higher, supported by expectations of sustained AI infrastructure spending and easing inflation data that reinforced hopes for lower U.S. interest rates. The combination of improving policy developments, stronger access to the Chinese market, and renewed analyst optimism helped lift AMD shares alongside other AI chipmakers.
Investors will continue watching for further developments in U.S. export policy, enterprise AI spending trends, and AMD's execution in the increasingly competitive AI accelerator market, where it continues to challenge Nvidia for market share.