Intel (INTC) shares retreated 2.6% during early Wednesday session trading after an unexpectedly robust inflation report halted a semiconductor sector rally that had been gaining momentum for several months.
Intel Corporation, INTC
The April Producer Price Index registered a 1.4% month-over-month increase — representing the fastest 12-month wholesale price growth since December 2022. The data unsettled investors throughout the chip manufacturing industry.
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) declined 3.1%. Qualcomm (QCOM) slipped 1.3%, following an 11% plunge the previous day. All three semiconductor stocks had been trading higher in premarket sessions before the economic data release.
The market’s apprehension is clear: elevated PPI figures contribute to the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge, the PCE index. Persistent inflation translates to reduced probability of rate reductions, potentially constraining AI infrastructure investment — and semiconductor demand with it.
Intel’s shares have experienced an extraordinary surge. The stock closed at $129.44 on May 11, representing a 93.8% gain since April 23, when the chipmaker released first-quarter results that exceeded analyst projections. By comparison, the S&P 500 (SPY) advanced approximately 4.3% during the identical timeframe.
That earnings surprise came with complications, however. Intel posted a net deficit of $4.3 billion in Q1. The foundry division specifically lost $2.4 billion in Q1 2026, virtually unchanged from the $2.3 billion deficit in Q1 2025.
Bank of America analyst Vivek Arya elevated Intel’s price objective to $96 from $56 after reports emerged of a tentative agreement between Intel and Apple for Intel to produce semiconductors utilized in Apple products.
Notwithstanding the target increase, Arya maintained an underperform (sell) recommendation on the shares. The primary rationale: even assuming a definitive agreement is finalized immediately, the partnership likely demands an additional two to three years for capital expenditure deployment, certification processes, and manufacturing scale-up. Substantial production volumes may not commence until 2028 or beyond.
BofA projects the Apple partnership at $35–$40 billion or greater in addressable market opportunity, with Intel potentially securing approximately 25% — translating to $10 billion-plus annually over the long term. However, analysts indicated they have not incorporated any of these projections into their existing financial models.
They additionally cautioned that expanding foundry capacity for Apple would initially compress gross margins, potentially delaying Intel’s foundry operating margin breakeven objective — presently targeted for 2027 — by an additional one to two years.
Beyond the Apple partnership, several additional developments have propelled INTC’s recent advance. Intel bought back Apollo’s equity position in the joint venture associated with its Fab 34 facility in Ireland. The company also revealed intentions to participate in Elon Musk’s Terafab initiative and secured a multiyear agreement with Google to construct AI and cloud infrastructure.
The most significant risk confronting Intel’s foundry strategy remains manufacturing yield performance. Its cutting-edge 18A process node has not yet achieved yields matching TSMC or Samsung, and Intel management offered encouraging commentary but no concrete metrics during the earnings conference call.
BofA’s identified downside scenarios include delayed 18A production ramps, insufficient major external foundry client wins, and ongoing market share erosion in the PC processor segment.
Intel stock traded at $129.44 as of the May 11 closing bell, representing more than 34% above BofA’s revised $96 price objective.
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