- Intel is presently and not using a CEO and its future appears unclear
- TSMC and Broadcom are interested by separate areas of the chip maker’s enterprise
- Any deal faces huge hurdles – authorities guidelines, manufacturing unit retooling, and political pushback
Though it debuted some super-fast AI chips in 2024 in a bid to match its rival AMD, Intel isn’t the powerhouse it was once.
Whereas Nvidia is the second-largest firm on the earth (behind Apple) by market cap, price $3.4 trillion, and AMD is in eightieth place, price $183.27 billion, Intel, presently and not using a CEO following Pat Gelsinger’s departure in December 2024, is languishing in 173rd place at $102.18 billion – putting it between Rio Tinto and Airbnb.
This has led to all types of rumors surrounding Intel’s future, together with hypothesis it may merge with AMD’s former foundry, GlobalFoundries, in a possible multi-billion-dollar deal. However now, maybe the saddest information of all comes from a brand new Wall Road Journal report, which says Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC) and Broadcom are individually contemplating offers that might break up the long-lasting chipmaker in half.
Massive hurdles to beat
The report claims Broadcom has been “carefully analyzing Intel’s chip-design and advertising enterprise”, and, in response to folks aware of the matter, has, “informally mentioned with its advisers making a bid however would probably solely achieve this if it finds a associate for Intel’s manufacturing enterprise, the folks stated.”
On the identical time, TSMC is contemplating taking management of Intel’s chip crops (both some or all) – a transfer that was apparently advised by the Trump administration. Nonetheless, the WSJ was advised by a White Home official that the president is “unlikely to help a deal that concerned a international entity working Intel’s factories,” so make of that what you’ll.
The WSJ stresses Broadcom and TSMC haven’t teamed as much as carve Intel in two – these are unrelated prospects – and the entire talks to date are “preliminary and largely casual.”
There are a few hurdles standing in the best way of such a deal. The 2022 Chips Act created a $53 billion grant program to spice up home chip manufacturing, with Intel receiving the most important share – as much as $7.9 billion. As a situation of the funding, the chipmaker should retain a majority stake in its factories if they’re ever spun off right into a separate entity. The U.S. authorities would additionally should approve any deal involving TSMC or different buyers taking management of Intel’s amenities.
The WSJ additionally notes that any deal faces operational points, noting Intel’s factories have largely been set as much as produce Intel chips, and the corporate has solely began attempting to make chips for exterior prospects up to now few years. “Retooling Intel factories to make superior chips TSMC’s manner could be a big and dear engineering problem,” it provides.