CIBCRYPTO
26.3K posts

CIBCRYPTO
@hansumcib
Web3 Products Tester | cibcrypto.base.eth



MAG7.ssi Component ETF Flow Watch | 05015 BTC ETFs: -$290.42M Net Inflow ETH ETFs: -$65.65M Net Inflow XRP ETFs: +$10.87M Net Inflow MAG7.ssi: Multi-Asset in One Token, Capture Crypto Growth with Ease. Trade MAG7.ssi on SoDEX — powered by an L1 order book: sodex.com/trade/spot/MAG… #BTC #ETH #SOL #XRP #ETF #Crypto #MAG7ssi #SoDEX


🚨SoSoValue Flash: Xi-Trump Summit Anchors Macro, Warsh Takes the Fed & AI Supply Shock 💥 Core Catalyst: Truce Extensions & Tehran Shadows Trump has landed in Beijing for a Thu–Fri summit with President Xi, placing Iran and trade at the center of the agenda. While Washington maintains a "no-rush" stance on the Hormuz stalemate, the summit serves as a critical buffer against "Tehran Shadows," with the market eyeing potential structural concessions to ease the energy blockade. 🔍 Key Logic Shifts: 1️⃣ Macro & PPI: April PPI printed hot, driven by energy, freight, and massive AI Capex, reinforcing the "Fed-on-hold" narrative. The Senate has confirmed Kevin Warsh as Fed Chair; he replaces Powell on May 15. Markets are now recalibrating for a more hawkish "Warsh Era" amid persistent pipeline inflation. 2️⃣ Supply Chain Risk: The Samsung union confirmed an 18-day strike starting May 21. As a cornerstone of global DRAM/NAND supply, this creates a major structural risk for memory pricing, potentially exacerbating supply constraints just as AI demand hits new peaks. 3️⃣ AI Resilience: After Tuesday’s dip, capital aggressively bought the Wednesday snap-back, signaling that "buy the dip" remains the dominant AI psychology. While the "top" debate intensifies, core leadership continues to run toward extremes, fueled by overwhelming consensus. 📊 Trade Setup (SoDEX Assets to Watch): Core: $USTECH-100 | $CL (Crude) | $XAUT | $BTC MAG7: $NVDA | $AMZN | $GOOGL | $META | $MSFT | $TSLA | $AAPL AI Hardware: $SNDK | $MU | $AMD | $INTC



Remix it. Drop yours below. 👇😆








🚨AMD's Second Act: From GPU Challenger to AI Infrastructure Duopoly AMD reported Q1 2026 results with revenue of $10.25B (+38% YoY), ahead of the $9.84B consensus; Non-GAAP EPS of $1.37 (+43% YoY), also beating expectations. GAAP net income came in at $1.38B (+95% YoY); Non-GAAP net income reached $2.27B (+45% YoY), with Non-GAAP gross margin at 55%. Free cash flow hit a record $2.6B for the quarter, more than tripling year-over-year. On the surface, the financials were a modest beat across the board — but AMD stock surged more than 18% in after-hours trading, briefly topping $410. The numbers alone don't explain the move. What does: CEO Lisa Su's forward guidance. Su stated that the server CPU TAM will double to $120B by 2030, that annual data center AI revenue is on track to reach "tens of billions of dollars," and reaffirmed a long-term Non-GAAP EPS target of over $20. ⚡️Core Theme: Data Center Takes the Wheel Data Center revenue reached $5.78B, up 57% YoY, crossing the halfway mark of total company revenue and becoming the primary driver of both top-line and earnings growth — powered by the dual engine of EPYC server CPUs and Instinct GPUs. The market's historical read on AMD's AI thesis was straightforward: can MI300/MI350/MI450 take share from NVIDIA? What this quarter's management commentary reframes is that agentic AI and inference workloads are driving a significant uplift in CPU demand as well. AI clusters don't just need GPUs for training and inference — they require substantial CPU capacity for orchestration, data preprocessing, head node management, and parallel task scheduling. AMD's advantage is now expanding from a single-point GPU play into a compound architecture: EPYC + Instinct + Helios, together. Critically, CEO Lisa Su raised AMD's server CPU TAM outlook significantly: the addressable market is now expected to grow at over 35% annually, reaching more than $120B by 2030 — effectively doubling the prior forecast of ~18% CAGR and a ~$60B TAM. 🌞Product Pipeline: MI450 / Helios Enter the Visible Order Cycle On the AI accelerator front, AMD confirmed that MI450 series GPUs have begun sampling with lead customers, and Helios rack-scale AI systems remain on track for production shipments in H2 2026. Su noted that customer demand forecasts for MI450 and Helios have already exceeded AMD's original 2027 plans, with new customers now in discussions for large-scale deployments — including additional multi-gigawatt opportunities. More significantly, AMD raised its confidence in 2027 data center AI revenue: management expressed conviction in achieving tens of billions of dollars in annual data center AI revenue in 2027, ahead of the prior long-term target of greater than 80% CAGR. On the hyperscaler side, the order book is becoming concrete: OpenAI and Meta have each committed to deploying 6GW of Instinct compute; Oracle plans to launch the world's first publicly available AI supercluster powered by 50,000 MI450 GPUs in Q3. Taken together, these three commitments are moving AMD's status as "AI compute's second source" from narrative to reality. Q2 Outlook: Above Expectations, Data Center Continues to Accelerate AMD guided Q2 revenue to approximately $11.2B (±$300M), meaningfully above the $10.5B consensus, representing roughly 46% growth YoY and 9% sequentially. Non-GAAP gross margin is guided at approximately 56%. Server CPU is expected to grow more than 70% for the full year, with both data center AI and server businesses projected to deliver double-digit sequential growth. 📈Bottom Line This quarter isn't just another beat. The on-track delivery of MI450 and Helios has moved AMD from "potential NVIDIA alternative" to "confirmed co-anchor of AI infrastructure." The after-hours surge to above $410 implies roughly 30x that $20 long-term EPS target — the market is pricing it in today. Notably, AMD had gone virtually nowhere over the prior three sessions, with tonight's after-hours move catching it up to Intel's recent gains. The capital rotation story isn't complicated: last Friday, Western Digital's blowout earnings ignited a fresh AI hardware rally, with funds rotating out of NVIDIA into memory and CPU names — Western Digital and Micron gained 28% and 24% respectively over three sessions, Intel added 15%, and AMD's earnings tonight became the final piece of that rotation trade. Looking further out, the key variables are whether MI450 and Helios ship on schedule, whether the Meta and OpenAI deployments convert into durable multi-year order flow, and whether EPYC can continue capturing share as AI-driven CPU demand structurally expands.

