Intel stock maintained a 10% surge in Monday premarket trading. The jump came after analyst Ming-Chi Kuo from TF International Securities predicted a major deal between Intel and Apple.
Intel Corporation, INTC
The rally started Friday when Kuo posted on X about his expectations. He believes Intel will begin shipping its lowest-end M processor to Apple by Q2 or Q3 2027.
Kuo’s latest industry surveys suggest something important. Visibility on Intel becoming an advanced-node supplier to Apple has improved recently.
The stock dipped 0.59% as of 6:26am ET Monday in early premarket trading. Still, the gains from Friday remained mostly intact.
The partnership timeline isn’t set in stone. Everything depends on the development process after Intel releases its process design kit.
This blueprint will let Apple’s engineers design the chips. Intel expects to release the kit in early 2026.
Apple gets its silicon chips for iPhone, iPad and Mac from TSMC right now. The Taiwanese company handles all of Apple’s advanced chip manufacturing.
Kuo doesn’t think the Intel deal will hurt TSMC much. He expects Apple to stay “highly dependent” on TSMC’s advanced nodes for years to come.
The analyst pointed out that order volumes for the lowest-end M processor are small. The deal would have virtually no material impact on TSMC’s fundamentals or technology leadership.
The potential Intel-Apple partnership carries political weight. Kuo said it would show strong support from Apple for the Trump administration’s domestic manufacturing goals.
Neither Intel nor Apple responded to CNBC’s request for comment.
Markham thinks success could lead to more business. Intel might win higher volume deals from Apple, like CPU production for the iPhone. The company could also attract other large chip designers.
Intel’s stock has bounced back over the past year. Share price dropped to $17.66 in April before recovering in recent months. The years of decline seem to be reversing.
The relationship between Intel and Apple goes way back. Intel first announced its processors would power some Apple products in 2005. Apple moved away from Intel processors in the early 2020s.
Last week TSMC filed a lawsuit against Intel. The Taiwanese company alleged a former senior vice president leaked “confidential information” to Intel. Intel did not respond to comment requests about the lawsuit.
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