On Friday, Intel shares hovered around $41.41, near the very top of the company’s 12-month range of $17.67 to $44.02. The stock has more than doubled over the past year, fueled by a wave of optimism around its foundry revival, its bold manufacturing roadmap, and a blockbuster investment from Nvidia.
But alongside the bullish momentum came dramatic price swings. Intel suffered a steep drop earlier in the week, falling more than 7% after investors reacted negatively to the company’s decision to retain its Networking (NEX) division.
The rebound was just as fast, a nearly 4% surge the next day, after upbeat commentary on AI demand and news of a $208 million Malaysia expansion project.
Intel Corporation, INTC
The biggest catalyst in Intel’s 2025 comeback story remains Nvidia’s $5 billion equity stake, purchased at $23.28 per share. Once newly issued shares settle, Nvidia will hold roughly a 4% ownership stake, making it one of Intel’s largest external shareholders.
The partnership goes far deeper than capital infusion. Under the agreement, Intel will design custom data-center CPUs for Nvidia’s next-generation AI systems and help integrate x86 SoCs with Nvidia’s RTX GPU chiplets, a move aimed squarely at the coming boom in AI-enhanced PCs.
This shift has been interpreted in two ways. Bulls see it as validation that Intel’s manufacturing still holds strategic value in the AI era while bears view it as a sign Intel needed outside rescue to remain competitive.
The U.S. government and SoftBank also joined the list of Intel backers, taking stakes worth billions to support domestic chip production and strengthen supply-chain security. These injections have given Intel the cash runway needed to continue its aggressive manufacturing overhaul.
Perhaps the most explosive storyline is the possibility of Apple returning to Intel, not as a CPU customer, but as a foundry client.
Reports from supply-chain analysts indicate Apple has already received Intel’s 18A/18AP process design kit, signed NDAs, and begun early evaluation for potential use in future low-end M-series processors. If performance and yield milestones are met, limited production could begin in 2027, with a projected volume of 15–20 million chips annually.
Some reports go further, suggesting Apple could even consider placing future non-Pro iPhone SoCs on Intel’s upcoming 14A node by 2028.
Nothing is finalized, but the mere possibility immediately reignited investor excitement, and contributed heavily to Intel’s recent surge.
Despite Intel’s dramatic resurgence, most analysts remain cautious. Across major forecasting platforms, consensus 12-month price targets fall between $32 and $36, implying 10–20% downside from current levels.
Some banks have issued outright downgrades, arguing the 2025 rally priced in too much optimism too quickly. Concerns persist around Intel’s still-thin earnings, the slow profitability of its foundry business, and the high-stakes nature of its 18A and 14A process roadmap.
For now, Intel’s story remains a tightrope, enormous strategic upside paired with equally significant execution risks.
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