This quarter, there was a noticeable change in Santa Clara. Given the direction of the company’s discourse, Intel’s first-quarter report contained figures that seemed almost out of place. $13.6 billion in revenue, a non-GAAP EPS of $0.29 compared to a consensus estimate of hardly a penny, and up to $14.8 billion in guidance for the upcoming quarter. The report’s tone was strangely assured for a company that had been discussed in terms of rescue operations for years. Investors took notice. The stock shifted.
It’s difficult to ignore the shift in the atmosphere surrounding INTC, which seems more psychological than mathematical. On April 23, you could witness the scramble in real time by watching the after-hours trading. The price rose above $66 and briefly touched $80.58 before settling. The market capitalization was close to $302 billion.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Company Name | Intel Corporation |
| Headquarters | Santa Clara, California, United States |
| Founded | July 18, 1968 |
| Founders | Gordon E. Moore, Robert Noyce, Arthur Rock |
| Current CEO | Lip-Bu Tan |
| Stock Ticker | INTC (NASDAQ) |
| Industry | Semiconductors |
| Q1 Revenue (2026) | $13.6 billion |
| Non-GAAP EPS | $0.29 |
| Market Cap (post-earnings) | ~$302.6 billion |
| Data Center & AI Segment | $5.1 billion (+22% YoY) |
| Intel Foundry Revenue | $5.4 billion (+16% YoY) |
| Foundry Operating Loss | $2.44 billion |
| Employees | Approx. 108,900 |
| Fortune 500 Ranking | Listed since 2007 |
| SEC Filings | Available via EDGAR database |
That is not a figure associated with a business that investors still view as flawed. The question changed at some point between the previous earnings cycle and this one. There was no longer any question about Intel’s survival on the analyst calls. They were making a more difficult request. Could the demand for AI CPUs really finance Intel’s aspirations?
Bulls are clinging to the Data Center and AI segment, which increased 22% year over year to $5.1 billion. Additionally, it’s the part that allows Intel to participate in a discussion it was previously excluded from for the first time in a long time. Nvidia remains at the top of the market-cap mountain, and according to Polymarket prediction markets, there is a 90% chance that Nvidia will be the biggest company by June 30. It says something that those odds haven’t changed much.

The Intel beat is seen by traders. They simply don’t think it poses a threat to Nvidia’s position just yet. The conviction on the other side is strong, and it would take about $48,000 in new volume to move those odds by even five percentage points.
Even so, there’s a feeling that something is coming loose. A year ago, the narrative surrounding Intel’s government-backed positioning as America’s onshore semiconductor champion didn’t carry as much weight. The construction cranes at Intel’s Ocotillo campus in Arizona convey a story that the press releases fail to adequately convey. When the White House discusses domestic chip manufacturing, CEOs frequently bring up Intel for a reason. That position is gradually being priced in and has significant political and economic implications.
Intel Foundry is the issue, and it’s a real one. Although the segment’s 16% revenue growth makes for a compelling headline, it also recorded a $2.44 billion operating loss. It’s not a rounding error. The benefits of the better quarters are still being absorbed by Foundry. Bulls contend that this is the price of developing an American substitute for TSMC.
Opponents contend that losses are outpacing customer gains. Real evidence can be cited by both parties. The company’s SEC filings provide information on how Intel’s financial structure has changed that isn’t included in the quarterly decks.
The way Intel stories typically develop is worth mentioning. Over the past ten years, the company has been declared finished several times, but each time something came back to life. Perhaps this is the reason for the current rally’s slightly uneasy vibe. Investors recall the years 2019 and 2021, when hope first appeared and then subtly vanished. The Q1 beat is believable. The rerating is still ongoing.
Whether this rally continues or ends will depend on what transpires between now and the next earnings cycle, particularly any announcements related to onshore production or deeper partnerships with Nvidia and Amazon. For the time being, Intel has acquired something it hasn’t had in a long time. Pay attention. Additionally, attention may be more important than numbers for a business attempting to repair its reputation piece by piece.
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