Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) stock has surged over 150% in 2026, and the big investors who once piled into Nvidia are now moving their money into AMD instead.
The shift is showing up everywhere, from Wall Street trading desks to the crypto markets trading stock perps. To see why it matters, start with just how dominant Nvidia has been.
Why Nvidia Has Been the One to Beat
Nvidia sits at the top of the chip world. It sells about eight of every ten AI chips and made almost $216 billion in sales last year, far more than any rival.
It is also hugely profitable, keeping roughly 75 cents of every sales dollar before other costs. That scale is exactly why a move away from it stands out.
Because when investors start leaving the strongest company in a field, it usually means they have found something better. Right now, that something is AMD.
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The Money Is Quietly Moving Into AMD Stock
The clearest sign is where the buying is going. A Chaikin Money Flow (CMF) gauge that tracks whether institutional investors are mostly buying or selling shows steady buying across AMD shares, at a positive 0.24 reading.
Nvidia shows the opposite, a negative reading, which means large holders are slowly selling. So the smart money is switching sides.
AMD is also climbing faster than the chip sector as a whole, while Nvidia now trails it at 51.9. And because AMD usually moves in step with the wider SOXX group, its lead reflects real strength, not a one-off jump.
It is already up about 150% this year, nearly double its 77.5% gain for all of 2025, and one of the biggest turnarounds in the group.
It has even finished among the sector’s three best performers in four separate months, tied for the most of any chip stock. That kind of steady winning is what draws big money in.
That buying is not limited to traditional investors, though. Crypto traders are even more convinced.
Crypto Traders Are the Most Bullish of All
On Hyperliquid, a platform where people bet on where prices head next, far more money is betting AMD rises than falls. The gap is the widest of any chip stock, at nearly two to one. Nvidia gets the cold shoulder there. Most of the money is betting it falls, the reverse of AMD.
But AMD is not just beating NVDA in the perp space. It has a better long/short ratio than any other chip player, showing the growing bullishness.
This matters because these traders tend to move fast and act early. Their bet lines up with one simple question, which is what AMD actually has coming.
What AMD Has That the Others Do Not
The pull starts with a strong quarter. AMD’s sales grew 38% to $10.3 billion, and its chips-for-data-centers business hit a record $5.8 billion, up 57%.
Profit grew even faster than sales, which is what investors most want to see. AMD also expects an even bigger quarter next.
It also holds an edge most rivals lack, because it sells both of the chips an AI data center needs, not just one. AMD makes the powerful chips that do the heavy AI number-crunching, and it also makes the general-purpose chips that run the servers around them.
Nvidia is known mainly for the first kind, so AMD can chase orders for both, and it expects the market for those server chips alone to pass $120 billion by 2030.
Those buyers are huge. OpenAI and Meta each signed multi-year deals, and Meta’s runs to about $60 billion, locking in years of sales. Oracle ordered 50,000 of AMD’s newest chips as well.
Analysts have raced to keep up, with one lifting its price forecast to $700. Still, the stock is priced for near-perfect results. It already fell almost 19% in a single month this year (in Feb) when its sales forecast came in lighter than investors hoped, even after a strong quarter.
For now, the buying, the deals, and the growth keep AMD stock ahead of Nvidia, but only for as long as AI spending stays strong.
The post Wall Street and Crypto Agree on One Chip Stock, and It Is Not Nvidia appeared first on BeInCrypto.

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