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1Here’s the super-short story, explained like you’re five:
Shares of Advanced Micro Devices (you can find it as NASDAQ:AMD) have been climbing like a rocket that most retirement savings can’t keep up with. Think of it this way:
Important Point (ELI5): A price target is just an expert’s best guess of what one share of a company will be worth in the future. It’s not a promise!
Most Wall Street experts have a more modest average guess of $512.27 for AMD. Then Ruben Roy came along and lifted his guess to $635 while saying “Buy” (meaning he thinks it’s a good deal). That’s about 16% higher than the current $548 price, and way above the average.
Why does he think that?
Roy’s core idea is simple: Companies that build AI computers are supply-constrained, not demand-constrained.
He says the recent small dip in chip stocks is just a “price reset” (like a sale that corrects an overpriced tag), not a real slowdown. He applied this same thinking to a whole basket of companies that sell the “picks and shovels” for the AI gold rush:
The data backs him up: AMD’s Data Center revenue (money from selling chips to big computer warehouses) grew 57% year-over-year (compared to same time last year) to $5.775 billion in Q1 2026.
Sponsor Callout (Deadline July 16): General Motors, POSCO, and over 50,000 everyday investors have already backed a lithium producer called EnergyX. Lithium prices are up 75% this year, and demand is expected to grow 5 times by 2040. EnergyX says its special tech can recover up to 3 times more lithium than old methods. You can become a private-stage investor, but only until July 16. (This is sponsored content from the original article.)
Now, the three big engines pushing AMD’s stock (listed as numbered steps in the original):
Hyperscaler lock-in.
“Hyperscalers” are giant tech clouds like Meta and OpenAI. Meta plans to deploy up to 6 gigawatts of AMD Instinct GPUs (think of a gigawatt as a giant power plant’s worth of computer brains), and OpenAI committed to another 6 gigawatts. That creates years of known future sales—exactly what long-term investors love.
Cash flow acceleration.
In Q1, AMD’s “free cash flow” (the cash left after paying bills) hit $2.566 billion, up 252.96% from last year. This lets them buy back their own shares and build new products without diluting (making each share worth less).
AMD has 1,630,601,000 shares floating around. If each share hits $635, the company’s total value (market cap) would sail into trillion-dollar territory (about $1.03 trillion), well above today’s ~$895 billion.
For that to happen, three conditions must hold (originally bulleted):
Important Risk Callout: The main danger is export controls (government rules limiting sales) and the natural up-and-down cycle of the chip business. Still, Roy’s $635 target is based on real booked orders and capacity promises, not just hype.
A US startup just passed a $1 billion private valuation, joining the club of billion-dollar private companies like OpenAI. Unlike those other “unicorns,” you can invest in EnergyX right now—but only until July 16.
Over 50,000 people already have, along with global giants like General Motors and POSCO. Why the buzz? EnergyX’s patented tech can recover up to 3X more lithium than traditional methods, and demand for lithium is expected to 5X current production by 2040.
(Original note: Contact editorial@247wallst.com for any questions or corrections about the article.)
Let’s wrap it up simply:
Q1: What does “price target” mean in kid terms?
A price target is like an expert’s sticker price guess for a stock a year or so from now. If they say $635, they think one share will be worth that much later.
Q2: Why is AMD’s “supply-constrained” situation good for the stock?
If they can’t make chips fast enough to meet eager buyers, it means demand is super strong. That usually lets the company sell at good prices and grow steadily, which investors like.
Q3: What are the three must-haves for AMD to hit $635?
Q4: What’s the EnergyX sponsor message all about?
It’s a paid note saying EnergyX (a lithium metal startup) is now worth over $1B privately, and regular people can invest alongside GM until July 16 because its tech pulls more lithium from the earth as battery demand rises.