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AMD inks chip deal with OpenAI that triggers explosive rally

Ian King / Bloomberg
Ian King / Bloomberg • 7 min read
AMD inks chip deal with OpenAI that triggers explosive rally
OpenAI' Sam Altman with AMD CEO Lisa Su / Photo: Bloomberg
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Advanced Micro Devices Inc landed a blockbuster deal with OpenAI to build artificial intelligence infrastructure, giving the chipmaker a chance to show it can mount a challenge to Nvidia Corp. in the AI computing industry.

AMD shares soared 24% to US$203.71 after the agreement was announced Monday, adding US$63.4 billion to the company’s market valuation. It’s now worth US$330.6 billion, more than Coca-Cola Co, General Electric Co or Chevron Corp.

OpenAI will deploy 6 gigawatts’ worth of AMD graphics processing units over multiple years, according to the pact, which is just over half the size of an agreement the AI startup recently reached with Nvidia. It also sets the stage for OpenAI to acquire a large stake in the chipmaker.

The deal represents a high-stakes test for AMD — one that could deliver tens of billions of dollars in new revenue and burnish its status as a serious contender in AI technology. There are also risks: It further ties AMD’s prosperity to an AI market that some worry is in a bubble.

“This is certainly the largest deployment we have announced so far,” AMD Chief Executive Officer Lisa Su said during an interview on Bloomberg Television. “Now we’re embarking on a massive build-out. It’s a big deal for us, for our shareholders and our teams.”

As part of the accord, OpenAI will have the ability to buy as many as 160 million shares of AMD at a penny apiece, depending on the project hitting certain milestones. That’s equivalent to about 10% of the chipmaker’s outstanding stock.

See also: Bank of Singapore uses AI agents to cut source of wealth report time to one hour

The targets require AMD’s share price to continue to increase in value. At the final level of the agreement, the stock would have to reach a price of US$600. AMD shares closed Friday at US$164.67.

The chipmaker wanted to make sure “OpenAI would be motivated for AMD to be successful,” Su said on a conference call. “And the more OpenAI deploys, the more revenue we get, and they get to share in the upside.”

The agreement is the latest huge data centre deal for OpenAI as the artificial intelligence startup builds out more computing capacity — an unprecedented bet by the technology industry that runaway demand for power-hungry AI tools will continue unabated.

See also: The babble about a looming AI bubble

In September, Nvidia said it would invest as much as US$100 billion in OpenAI to build AI infrastructure and new data centres with a capacity of at least 10 gigawatts of power. That’s equal to the peak electricity demand of New York City.

It’s unclear how exactly OpenAI will finance the enormous costs associated with the chips and data centres needed to build and run more advanced AI systems. Two months ago, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said he wants to spend “trillions” on infrastructure to secure the computing resources he thinks the company needs for AI services. To bankroll that, Altman said his company is working to devise a “new kind” of financial instrument, without providing details.

On Bloomberg Television, OpenAI President Greg Brockman was asked how his company would fund its massive projects. He said the startup is pursuing a number of different options, including debt and equity. There’s a widespread underestimation of the amount of computing required for AI, he said. Without more infrastructure, OpenAI is constrained in the new features and products it can launch.

“We look at equity and debt and all kinds of ways to pay for it,” he said in the interview. “The revenue will eventually be there.”

Meanwhile, there’s concern that the AI industry could suffer a fate similar to the dot-com craze of the late 1990s, which ended in a spectacular crash and a wave of bankruptcies. The fears have only grown as multibillion-dollar AI chip and data centre deals proliferate globally. The financing is coming from venture capital, debt and, lately, some more unconventional arrangements that have raised eyebrows on Wall Street.

For AMD, the deal keeps its technology in the mix as OpenAI and other owners of large-scale data centres funnel billions toward expanding AI capacity. The chipmaker remains a distant second to Nvidia in the market for so-called accelerator processors.

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AMD’s revenue from this area is projected to reach US$6.55 billion this year. It expects the tie-up with OpenAI to add to these sales next year and accelerate in 2027. The deal also is going to provide a springboard to greater adoption of its technology that could take its revenue from the area to above US$100 billion, executives said, without specifying a time frame.

It wasn’t immediately clear exactly what the pace of OpenAI’s chip deployments will look like as part of the AMD deal. Su said on the call Monday that the idea is to deploy products as soon as possible. She pointed to the fact that the stock warrant structure is set up to run over the course of five years, until Oct 5, 2030.

The AMD commitment may help OpenAI decrease reliance on Nvidia’s technology. OpenAI and data centre operators spend a huge portion of their infrastructure budgets on products from that company.

Nvidia’s data centre division alone has more revenue than any other chipmaker has in total. In its latest financial year, the unit more than doubled to US$115 billion in sales and is on course to show similar growth in the current period.

Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon said it wasn’t previously clear if AMD customers were just placing orders to gain negotiating leverage with Nvidia and others. The OpenAI might be large enough to show that’s changing, he said. “But we will watch to see if it does spark more legitimate interest from other sizable customers.”

AMD, like other companies tied to the AI infrastructure build-out, is now dependent on OpenAI’s huge plans coming to fruition, Rasgon said. For a long time, Altman has had the power to either crash the economy or “take us to the promised land,” the analysts said. “Right now we don’t know which is in the cards.”

AMD spent much of its life as a challenger to Intel Corp in the market for personal computer and server processors. It has won away some customers from Intel under Su, and AMD’s push into AI chips has further enamoured the company with investors. Even before Monday’s rally, the shares had gained 36% this year.

Chief Financial Officer Jean Hu said the OpenAI agreement would boost AMD’s earnings per share, with “tens of billions of dollars in revenue for AMD.”

Under the agreement, OpenAI’s AMD stock warrants will vest when the first gigawatt of computing is deployed — a rollout that will start in the second half of next year. Those computers will be based on AMD Instinct MI450 chips. Additional portions will vest as further hardware is put in place.

Nvidia, the world’s largest publicly traded company, pioneered the market for graphics processors, a type of chip that’s become the basis of processors used to train and run AI software. The company has made the industry more reliant on its technology with additional software, computing and networking equipment — all designed to make it easy to quickly deploy large amounts of data centre infrastructure.

AMD is rapidly adding capabilities as it aims to match Nvidia’s breadth of offerings and help it play a broader role.

“This is a huge pie,” Su said on Bloomberg TV. “As much as we love to work with OpenAI, we are working with a lot of other customers as well.”

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