AMD stock jumps 4% to start 2026 as chip rally returns — CES keynote now the next test

AMD stock jumps 4% to start 2026 as chip rally returns — CES keynote now the next test

New York, January 3, 2026, 10:01 ET — Market closed

  • AMD closed higher in the first U.S. session of 2026 as chip stocks led Wall Street’s rebound.
  • Investors’ next near-term catalyst is CEO Lisa Su’s CES keynote in Las Vegas on Monday night.
  • Next week’s U.S. jobs report is a key macro checkpoint for rate-sensitive tech shares.

Advanced Micro Devices Inc (AMD.O) shares ended Friday, Jan. 2 up 4.35% at $223.47, tracking a broad rally in semiconductor stocks on the first trading day of 2026. The chipmaker traded between $218.90 and $227.15, with about 36.45 million shares changing hands, and remained about 16% below its 52-week high of $267.08. 1

Chip stocks powered a rebound that snapped a four-day losing streak for U.S. equities, with the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index — a benchmark for major chipmakers — up 4%, Reuters reported. Joe Mazzola, head of trading and derivatives strategist at Charles Schwab, said the market is seeing a “buy the dip, sell the rip” mindset, a strategy of buying pullbacks and selling into rallies. 2

The next focal point is CES in Las Vegas, where AMD said CEO Lisa Su will deliver the official CES 2026 opening keynote on Monday, Jan. 5 at 9:30 p.m. ET. AMD’s event page teased updates on its AI vision “from cloud to enterprise, edge and devices.” 3

Peers also advanced in Friday’s session: Nvidia closed up about 1.2% and Intel rose about 6.7%, according to market data.

AMD sells processors used in personal computers and servers, and a growing lineup of graphics chips used as “accelerators” — hardware designed to speed up AI workloads. Nvidia dominates the AI accelerator market, while Intel remains AMD’s main rival in x86 central processing units, or CPUs.

A key question heading into CES is whether AMD’s updates strengthen the case for “AI PCs” — laptops built with chips that can run some AI features on the device rather than sending every task to the cloud. Investors have been watching for proof that those features translate into higher-priced chips and steadier PC demand.

Traders will also listen for any roadmap and customer signals that could shape expectations for AMD’s data-center momentum, where Wall Street has been trying to gauge how quickly the company can translate AI demand into revenue and margins.

Rate expectations remain a swing factor. Higher yields tend to pressure long-duration growth stocks, and chipmakers have often traded as a proxy for that risk appetite after last year’s strong run.

Before the next session on Monday, attention will be on whether the chip rally extends beyond a one-day burst and how investors position ahead of Su’s late-evening CES keynote.

Macro data sits close behind. Reuters’ Take Five column flagged the next installment of key U.S. jobs data on Jan. 9, with a Reuters poll forecasting 55,000 jobs added in December. 4

AMD’s investor relations calendar currently lists no upcoming events, leaving the next earnings date unconfirmed. Wall Street Horizon shows an unconfirmed earnings date of Feb. 3, after market, based on historical reporting patterns. Technically, traders will watch whether the stock can hold above Friday’s low near $219 and retest the $227 area set by the session high. 5

Stock Market Today

Liberty Global stock ends higher as Class B shares spike, with earnings next on deck

Liberty Global stock ends higher as Class B shares spike, with earnings next on deck

7 February 2026
New York, February 7, 2026, 09:16 EST — Market closed. Liberty Global’s Class B shares surged as much as 139% on Friday in unusually heavy trading, while the cable operator’s more liquid Class A stock finished the day up about 4.3%, closing at $11.75. 1 The split move matters now because Liberty Global has multiple share classes that can trade out of sync, and Friday’s spike hit just ahead of the company’s next earnings checkpoint. Traders also get another test of risk appetite when U.S. markets reopen on Monday after a week of sharp swings. Friday’s bounce came as Wall
Amazon stock tumbles on $200 billion AI spend plan — what to know before Monday

Amazon stock tumbles on $200 billion AI spend plan — what to know before Monday

7 February 2026
Amazon shares fell 5.6% to $210.32 on Friday after the company projected about $200 billion in 2026 capital expenditures, triggering investor concern over AI spending. The stock had already dropped 11.5% after-hours Thursday. Amazon forecast Q1 net sales of $173.5–$178.5 billion and operating income of $16.5–$21.5 billion. Analyst Gil Luria downgraded Amazon, citing rising investment as its cloud lead narrows.
AMD stock jumps 8% in chip rebound — what investors are watching before Monday

AMD stock jumps 8% in chip rebound — what investors are watching before Monday

7 February 2026
AMD shares jumped 8.2% to $208.44 Friday, trading on heavy volume as chip stocks rebounded and the Dow closed above 50,000 for the first time. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index rose 5.7% after Amazon’s AI spending plans lifted sector estimates. Nvidia’s CEO cited surging AI chip demand. AMD’s rally followed a weak revenue outlook earlier in the week.
Broadcom stock edges up as chip shares rally to start 2026; AI valuations back in focus
Previous Story

Broadcom stock edges up as chip shares rally to start 2026; AI valuations back in focus

Google stock (GOOG) starts 2026 higher — here’s what could move Alphabet next
Next Story

Google stock (GOOG) starts 2026 higher — here’s what could move Alphabet next

Go toTop