AMD stock slides as hot inflation data hits chips, with Meta and Nutanix AI deals in focus

February 27, 2026
AMD stock slides as hot inflation data hits chips, with Meta and Nutanix AI deals in focus

New York, Feb 27, 2026, 16:54 EST — After-hours.

  • AMD shares ended lower for a second straight session as chip stocks weakened with the broader market.
  • Investors are weighing AMD’s fresh enterprise AI push with Nutanix against its long-dated supply pact with Meta.
  • Attention turns to AMD’s March 3 appearance at Morgan Stanley’s TMT conference for any update on demand and rollout timing.

Advanced Micro Devices (AMD.O) shares fell 1.72% on Friday to close at $200.18, after trading between $197.75 and $201.86. Volume was about 25.4 million shares, in line with recent sessions. 1

The move matters because AMD has become a live wire for AI infrastructure trades again. Big-customer tie-ups are landing, but the stock is still moving with rate fears and the broader risk mood.

U.S. stocks ended lower and tech did the damage. The Nasdaq fell 0.92%, and chip shares slipped with Nvidia (NVDA.O) down 4.2%. “To wrap up the month of February, we were reminded there are still some cracks out there,” said Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group. 2

A hotter-than-expected producer price report added to the pressure by pushing out expectations for near-term rate cuts. The Labor Department said the Producer Price Index rose 0.5% in January, while core PPI climbed 0.8%. “Wider margins for producers could add some upside for consumer costs in coming months as firms pass along higher costs for services,” said Ben Ayers, senior economist at Nationwide. 3

AMD’s latest company catalyst came late Wednesday, when it announced a multi-year partnership with Nutanix (NTNX.O) aimed at building an open, full-stack AI infrastructure platform for “agentic AI” — systems designed to plan and take actions, not just answer prompts. AMD said it would invest $150 million in Nutanix stock at $36.26 a share and fund up to $100 million for joint engineering and go-to-market work, for a total commitment of up to $250 million. “Enterprise customers need the freedom to run the models and workloads that matter most to their business, without compromise,” AMD executive Dan McNamara said. 4

Earlier this week, AMD struck a separate supply agreement with Meta Platforms (META.O) that AMD said could reach up to $60 billion over five years, and it gives Meta the option to buy as much as 10% of AMD. “Meta is locking in supply, diversifying away from a single vendor,” said Matt Britzman, senior equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown. The deal also includes a warrant for 160 million shares with an exercise price of one cent, Reuters reported. 5

Meta framed the pact as part of a broader effort to spread its AI compute bets, including for inference — the step where a trained model generates answers for users. “We’re excited to form a long-term partnership with AMD to deploy efficient inference compute,” Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said, adding the agreement would help diversify Meta’s compute. 6

A separate securities filing showed AMD technology chief Mark Papermaster moved stock into two grantor retained annuity trusts on Feb. 24, transferring 206,606 shares to each trust, according to a Form 4 filed on Thursday. 7

But the calendar for these AI wins is long, and the near-term tape is still being set by rates. The Nutanix investment is not slated to close until the second quarter and needs approvals, while the Meta agreement hinges on a buildout that plays out over years — and the dilution math from stock-linked incentives keeps sitting in the background.

Next up, investors will look for any new detail when AMD appears at the Morgan Stanley Technology, Media & Telecom Conference on March 3, an event that often draws questions on AI demand, pricing and delivery timing. 8