The real problem with AMD is what will happen when they get to 25-30% market share (assuming it's possible). How many CPUs will they be able to make on a cutting edge outsourced node? How many will have to stay on an older one (exactly the issue Intel has today).
Gamers and desktops enthusiasts may be fine with the idea of 3950X that wins reviews but is almost impossible to buy. This will not fly in general market.
And of course there's a problem with AMD stock itself. It's few times overvalued at the moment. I have no idea why anyone would want to buy at this point.
I'm pretty sure Tiger Lake (or at least Ice Lake) will arrive in desktops earlier.
Of course it's the least important market so Intel would love to over servers first.
However, if their 10nm supply isn't large enough for Xeon lineup, they may as well move it to high-end desktops.
I still think AMD stock will go higher as there is still room to grow and Ryzen 4000 plus consoles will sell very well, but there is a wall coming for these markets as performance gains drop off very fast in the next 5 years, I have no doubt this will be the case. The problem is timing of when that wall hits and how soon you cash out before the crash comes, and the crash will come, its all just a matter of timing and how greedy do you want to be. Nvidia is smarter than AMD because they are into healthcare, AI, and self-driving vehicles now, that is the future of profits, especially the healthcare one. AMD hasn't even touched healthcare stuff and is way behind in the other two. Short term, long term, it's all quite complicated really. AMD is still worth buying now though I guess, as long as you know around Ryzen 6000 series its time to cash out cause silicon gains will crash hard eventually.
I have a etrade acccount and I used to be a research stock analyst with a major investment bank from 2005-2008.
Nice I think I would be good at something like that myself. I really enjoy researching all that stuff and debating it with people to see if its worthy investment. etrade, noted, might look into that someday when the next recession comes, markets have cycles and there will be a large crash eventually for 90% of all stocks like there was in 2008. when that day comes, investing when it hits bottom is going to be smart, cause humans will never stop spending and living, eventually they will rise back up. buy low and sell high, the world isn't going to end like so many fear, i mean yeah for some companies sure, but if you make educated cases and diversify should still be profitable.
Try Ameritrade.
You can do it online with minimal fees.
Noted, tyvm, I will compare to etrade.
Oh please. After a crypto period this forum is going to become an AMD stock speculation den? :/
well I am not going to let you or anyone else stop me from thinking and as long as w1zz doesn't feel it's off topic, it's not up to you. it's a
tech stock and we are trying to
power up our critical thinking skills