
NVIDIA's Q3 results underscore its absolute dominance in the AI chip sector—its single-quarter revenue is nearly 1.5 times AMD's full-year revenue. According to Wells Fargo data, NVIDIA has maintained an 80%-90% share of the AI accelerator market, while AMD's data center revenue in Q3 2025 reached only $4.34 billion, less than 1/10 of NVIDIA's 同期 figure. More concerning, AMD's share of the discrete GPU market has slipped to 6%, compared to NVIDIA's jump to 94%. Growing market concentration has trapped AMD in a cyclical challenge: scale gap - R&D investment - performance gap.
To counter NVIDIA's monopoly, AMD has adopted a differentiated breakthrough strategy: Cost-effective product positioning: The Instinct MI350 series, priced at 10,000−15,000 (half the cost of NVIDIA's H100), delivers a 33% dollars-per-token advantage in inference scenarios, backed by 288GB HBM3e memory and 8TB/s bandwidth Open-source ecosystem disruption: The ROCm 7 platform boosts inference performance by 3.5x, supports 2.1 million Hugging Face models, and won the World Internet Conference Science and Technology Award, attracting partners including Meta and Alibaba Cloud Strategic order breakthroughs: Securing a 6GW computing power partnership with OpenAI and an order for 50,000 MI450 chips from Oracle, these deals are expected to generate over $100 billion in revenue over the next few years
Despite AMD's 56% stock price gain in the past month, short-term disruption of NVIDIA's position remains challenging. The core barrier lies in ecosystem lock-in: NVIDIA's CUDA platform boasts 6 million developers and over 300 accelerated libraries, creating high customer migration costs. Nevertheless, AMD's breakthroughs are gaining traction. Its inference-focused differentiated approach aligns with the market's shift from training to inference, while the expanding open-source ecosystem is attracting price-sensitive customers and cloud providers seeking supply chain diversification. Long-term, AMD is unlikely to replicate its CPU market upset against Intel, but it is poised to steadily gain share in niche segments like AI inference and data centers—forging a dual-track landscape where NVIDIA leads in high-end training, and AMD captures mid-to-low-end inference.