Shares of Intel slumped and its rivals surged on Friday after the US chip maker signalled it may give up manufacturing its own components after falling far behind schedule developing its newest technology.
Intel plunged 15% after CEO Bob Swan told investors on a conference call late on Thursday that Intel’s new 7-nanometre chip technology was six months behind schedule and that Intel may pay other manufacturers to produce its chip designs.
Designing and manufacturing its own PC and server chips has given Intel a lead over rivals for decades, and a move away from that model would strengthen smaller rival AMD, which surged 15%.
“This, our 45th Intel earnings call, was the worst we have seen in our career covering the company,” Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon wrote in a client note, cutting his Intel rating to “underperform”.
“Frankly, none of the numbers matter. In fact, investors could have stopped reading the press release after the fourth line on the first page, which indicated Intel delaying their 7nm trajectory with yields running a year behind internal targets,” Rasgon wrote.
TSMC soars
US shares of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, the world’s largest contract chip manufacturer, jumped 12%. Intel’s potential surrender in manufacturing means one less competitor for TSMC, and a potential new customer.
Semiconductor manufacturing equipment makers KLA, Applied Materials and US shares of ASML Holding fell between 2% and 6% on expectations that Intel may build and upgrade fewer factories.
Nvidia climbed 1.1%, bringing its market capitalisation to US$252-billion and extending its lead as the most valuable US chip maker after eclipsing Intel earlier this month. Following Friday’s plunge, Intel’s stock market value was $217-billion. — Reported by Noel Randewich, (c) 2020 Reuters