Key Takeaways
- A partnership exceeding $100 billion has been formed between Meta and AMD, delivering 6 gigawatts of AI computing capacity across five years.
- The agreement includes AMD’s MI450 GPU processors alongside custom-designed CPUs tailored to Meta’s specifications.
- Warrant agreements enable Meta to purchase as much as 10% of AMD shares at $0.01 each, with vesting conditions tied to stock price milestones reaching $600.
- Initial deployment of one gigawatt of MI450 processors begins in the latter half of 2026.
- This partnership follows AMD’s comparable arrangement with OpenAI from the previous year and intensifies rivalry with Nvidia and Broadcom.
Advanced Micro Devices has secured its most substantial chip agreement to date, forming a partnership with Meta Platforms to deliver 6 gigawatts of AI computing infrastructure valued beyond $100 billion.
Tuesday’s announcement detailed the five-year partnership framework. Central to the arrangement is AMD’s forthcoming MI450 GPU, with initial deployment of one gigawatt scheduled for the second half of 2026.
Meta played an active role in defining the MI450’s specifications. The processor emphasizes inference capabilities — the computational process that generates AI model responses to user prompts — with particular optimization for this workload type.
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., AMD
According to AMD’s projections, each gigawatt of computing capacity represents chip revenue measured in several tens of billions of dollars.
The partnership extends beyond graphics processors to include AMD central processing units. Among these CPUs, Meta will receive a specially customized variant engineered to balance high performance with efficient power consumption. Two generations of AMD CPU technology fall under the agreement’s scope.
Warrant Agreement Details
The arrangement includes AMD granting Meta warrants for acquiring up to 160 million AMD shares at a nominal price of $0.01 per share. Full exercise of these warrants would establish Meta as a 10% shareholder in AMD.
Vesting conditions apply to the warrant structure. AMD’s stock must achieve progressively higher price targets, with the final warrant portion requiring the stock to reach $600. Monday’s closing price stood at $196.60.
Additional vesting requirements include “technical and commercial considerations” that Meta must satisfy for each warrant tranche to become available.
The framework closely resembles AMD’s late-2025 agreement with OpenAI. Industry observers have characterized such arrangements as “circular financing” — a pattern where payment flows between companies create reciprocal business relationships.
Meta’s Diversified Supplier Strategy
Meta maintains relationships with multiple chip providers rather than committing exclusively to AMD. The company affirms ongoing purchases from various vendors while simultaneously advancing proprietary processor development.
Last week’s announcements included Meta’s commitment to acquire several million Nvidia GPUs, representing an investment anticipated to reach tens of billions of dollars.
Santosh Janardhan, Meta’s infrastructure leader, explained that the massive scale of the company’s data center expansion necessitates working with multiple silicon suppliers.
“All of the chip makers end up having sort of a seat at the table,” Janardhan said.
Meta’s roadmap calls for deploying “tens of gigawatts” of data center computing infrastructure throughout this decade, while CEO Mark Zuckerberg envisions scaling to “hundreds of gigawatts or more over time.” Infrastructure spending reached $72 billion last year, with 2026 budgets projected between now and $135 billion.
AMD CEO Lisa Su characterized the agreement as a strategic move to compete for major long-term customer relationships against Nvidia.
“Meta has a lot of choices,” Su said. “I want to make sure that we are always a clear seat at the table when they think about what they need next.”
The partnership positions AMD as a stronger competitor to Broadcom, currently holding the leading position in custom AI chip design. AMD’s MI450 employs a chiplet-based architecture that enables greater customization flexibility compared to earlier monolithic chip designs.

