If You'd Put $1,000 Into AMD Stock 20 Years Ago, Here's What You'd Have Today
Advanced Micro Devices stock is soaring thanks to AI, but as a buy-and-hold bet, it's been a market laggard.
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The artificial intelligence (AI) gold rush has been a boon for investors in Advanced Micro Devices (AMD). Massive demand from the buildout of data centers has AMD stock soaring.
After falling nearly 20% in 2024, AMD stock returned close to 80% in 2025, and the outlook would appear bright. Analysts have never been more collectively bullish on the tech stock's prospects.
But while AMD has been a market-beater for more than a decade, truly long-term shareholders are sitting on disappointing returns. The chipmaker spent the first part of the past 20 years having a sort of "lost decade." As much success as AMD is enjoying now, it wasn't too long ago that shares were essentially priced for irrelevance, or worse.
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Founded in 1969, AMD spent decades as a second-class citizen to Intel (INTC), which came to dominate the market for PCs. Intel was the innovator, and AMD licensed the former's technology to make clones.
By the early 2000s, however, the company began to shape its own destiny — and to compete directly against Intel. The key was AMD's Athlon 64 technology, which gave customers a competitive, and sometimes superior, alternative, to Intel's CPUs.
Sadly, the good times didn't last long. Although its 2006 acquisition of graphics chipmaker ATI laid the foundation for AMD's success in GPUs today, the $5.4 billion price tag nearly bankrupted the company.
Bigger troubles were to come. By the 2010s, AMD and Intel were locked in a CPU arms race to develop ever more powerful chips. When its much-anticipated Bulldozer architecture proved to be slower, hotter and less energy efficient than Intel's latest chips, it looked as if AMD might be finished.
If AMD had a nadir, it was July 27, 2015. With analysts and investors fretting about bankruptcy, AMD hit an all-time low of $1.61.
CEO Lisa Su is credited with executing one of the greatest turnarounds in history. AMD dropped its legacy as a low-cost supplier, pivoting to high-performance computing. Its Ryzen multi-core technology became a hit in the PC market, while EPYC processors began to systematically strip market share from Intel in the lucrative data-center market.
If there were any doubts that AMD was for real, they were put to rest by the 2022 acquisition of Xilinx. The $49 billion deal was the largest in the history of the semiconductor industry. It also marked another AMD pivot, this time toward AI.
The bottom line on AMD stock?
Long-time shareholders have put up with a lot of angst and drama through the years, and for most of them, it's paid off.
Over its entire life as a publicly traded company, the large-cap stock generated an annualized total return (price change plus dividends) of 12.1%. That beats the S&P 500 in the same span by more than a percentage point.
Other standardized time frames are even more impressive. AMD stock has outperformed the broader market — often by wide to gaping margins — over the past one-, three-, five-, 10- and 15-year periods too.
Sadly, timing, while not everything, very much matters. Investors who made a lump-sum investment in the semiconductor stock two decades ago are playing catch-up.
Have a look at the above chart and you'll see that if you'd put $1,000 into AMD stock 20 years ago, it would today be worth $6,300, or an annualized return of 9.7%
The same sum invested in the S&P 500 would theoretically be worth almost $8,000 today — good for a return of 11%.
As for where AMD goes from here, as noted above, Wall Street has never been this bullish on AMD stock before. Of the 53 analysts covering the name, 36 call it a Strong Buy, five say Buy, and 12 have it at Hold, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. That works out to a consensus recommendation of Buy, with very high conviction.
More Stocks of the Past 20 Years
- If You'd Put $1,000 Into Netflix Stock 20 Years Ago, Here's What You'd Have Today
- If You'd Put $1,000 Into Microsoft Stock 20 Years Ago, Here's What You'd Have Today
- If You'd Put $1,000 Into Apple Stock 20 Years Ago, Here's What You'd Have Today
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Dan Burrows is Kiplinger's senior investing writer, having joined the publication full time in 2016.
A long-time financial journalist, Dan is a veteran of MarketWatch, CBS MoneyWatch, SmartMoney, InvestorPlace, DailyFinance and other tier 1 national publications. He has written for The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg and Consumer Reports and his stories have appeared in the New York Daily News, the San Jose Mercury News and Investor's Business Daily, among many other outlets. As a senior writer at AOL's DailyFinance, Dan reported market news from the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.
Once upon a time – before his days as a financial reporter and assistant financial editor at legendary fashion trade paper Women's Wear Daily – Dan worked for Spy magazine, scribbled away at Time Inc. and contributed to Maxim magazine back when lad mags were a thing. He's also written for Esquire magazine's Dubious Achievements Awards.
In his current role at Kiplinger, Dan writes about markets and macroeconomics.
Dan holds a bachelor's degree from Oberlin College and a master's degree from Columbia University.
Disclosure: Dan does not trade individual stocks or securities. He is eternally long the U.S equity market, primarily through tax-advantaged accounts.
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