Advanced Micro Devices stock on Xetra dips as Artificial Intelligence chip rivalry and Cohere deal shape sentiment

Advanced Micro Devices shares on Xetra fell 1.10 percent to 137.22 euros as investors weighed valuation, upcoming earnings, and fresh Artificial Intelligence headlines. Coverage highlights an expanded Cohere partnership and rising competition in Artificial Intelligence accelerators.

Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (ETR: AMD) on Deutsche Börse Xetra closed at 137.22 euros, down 1.10 percent or 1.52, as of Sep 30, 2025, 5:35 PM CET. The one-year change shows a 1.10 percent decline. Intraday trading ranged between 135.88 and 138.00, against a 52-week band of 69.00 to 162.12. Turnover reached 19,577 shares versus an average of 41,301, with the stock opening at 137.42 after a previous close at 138.74. The listing is quoted in euros on a delayed basis.

Valuation and risk markers remain elevated. The company reports a market capitalization of 223.21 billion, a trailing EPS of 1.48, a price-to-earnings ratio of 92.28, and a forward P/E of 31.74. The stock shows a beta of 1.92 and a relative strength index of 50.34. Advanced Micro Devices does not pay a dividend, and the next earnings date is scheduled for Oct 28, 2025. Trailing twelve-month revenue is 25.26 billion and net income 2.42 billion, with the site indicating 2024 growth of 13.69 percent in revenue and 92.15 percent in earnings. The platform notes that financial figures are in U.S. dollars.

Advanced Micro Devices operates across data center, client and gaming, and embedded segments. The company offers Artificial Intelligence accelerators, x86 microprocessors, and graphics processing units as standalone products or integrated into accelerated processing units, chipsets, and data center and professional GPUs. Its portfolio also includes embedded processors, semi-custom system-on-chip products, and related development services and technology, as well as data processing units. Founded in 1969, the company reports approximately 28,000 employees. The Xetra ticker is AMD.

Recent headlines center on Artificial Intelligence demand and competitive dynamics. Coverage highlights Citigroup’s forecast for a trillion-dollar Artificial Intelligence spending boom that could benefit Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices, while Barron’s notes Broadcom and Advanced Micro Devices are vying for the number two spot in Artificial Intelligence chips behind Nvidia. Nasdaq reports that Advanced Micro Devices is gaining traction in Artificial Intelligence infrastructure, citing record sales, new Instinct MI350 GPUs, and major partnerships. Multiple outlets also detail an expanded global collaboration with Cohere that enables customers to run Cohere models on AMD Instinct GPU infrastructure for enterprise and sovereign deployments. Separately, trading desks flagged selling by Ark Invest’s Cathie Wood and fresh options activity, underscoring mixed near-term sentiment.

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