Intel plans to eliminate thousands of jobs to reduce costs and fund an ambitious effort to rebound from an earnings slump and market share losses.
The workforce reduction may be announced as early as this week, according to people familiar with the company’s plans, who asked not to be identified because the information isn’t public. Intel, which is scheduled to report second-quarter earnings on Thursday, has about 110 000 employees, excluding workers at units that are being spun out.
CEO Pat Gelsinger is spending heavily on research and development aimed at improving Intel’s technology and helping it return to prominence in the semiconductor industry. The company’s once-dominant position eroded under Gelsinger’s predecessors as rivals like AMD have caught up and taken market share. An Intel spokesman declined to comment.
Intel shares rose about 1% in late trading, reaching as high as $31.11, on the news.
Other chip makers led by Nvidia have sprinted ahead in the development of lucrative semiconductors tailored for demanding artificial intelligence-related tasks. Intel is also coming to grips with uneven demand for chips that run laptops and desktop computers, its main business.
Gelsinger, betting that Intel can improve its technology, embarked on a plan to build factories to manufacture semiconductors for other chip makers. Last week, Intel hired Naga Chandrasekaran from Micron Technology as chief global operations officer, putting him in charge of the company’s overall manufacturing efforts.
Flat
Intel reduced its workforce about 5% in 2023 to 124 800 by year’s end after announcing job cuts beginning in October 2022. It also has slowed spending in other areas. The company expected those cost reductions would save as much as $10-billion by 2025.
Analysts project that Intel will report that second-quarter revenue was flat, compared with a year earlier. Growth will pick up modestly in the second half of 2024, and total sales will increase 3% to $55.7-billion for the full year, according to Wall Street estimates. That would be the first annual revenue increase since 2021. — Mackenzie Hawkins and Jane Lanhee Lee, with Ian King, (c) 2024 Bloomberg LP