英特尔股价因强劲的AI前景而飙升,创下2000年8月以来的新高。
Intel Shares Soar On Strong AI-Fueled Outlook, Surpassing August 2000 Peak

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/intel-shares-soar-strong-ai-fueled-outlook-surpassing-august-2000-peak

## 英特尔显示出强劲复苏的迹象 英特尔发布了强劲的第一季度财报,各项关键指标均超出预期,包括营收(135.8亿美元)、每股收益(0.29美元)和毛利率(41%)。 数据中心与人工智能 (+22%) 和英特尔代工厂 (+16%) 领域的增长尤为显著,预示着人工智能基础设施建设可能带来的益处。 然而,英特尔乐观的第二季度预测——预计营收在138亿美元至148亿美元之间,每股收益约为0.20美元——真正提振了投资者信心,盘后交易中股价上涨14%,超过了2000年的峰值。 首席执行官利普·布·谭强调了对英特尔CPU和先进封装的需求不断增加,这得益于向“代理”人工智能的转变,需要更靠近最终用户的处理能力。该公司正在大力投资以扩大工厂产量以满足这种需求,并通过近期投资加强了资产负债表,甚至回购了之前出售的一家工厂。 尽管营收仍低于峰值,但英特尔的 turnaround 似乎正在加速,这得益于人工智能的繁荣和战略投资。

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原文

Chipmaker Intel, which less than a year ago was trading like a distressed company, and required a capital infusion from the US government, and earlier today hit a 90x forward PE...

... soared after hours after giving a strong sales forecast for the current period, signaling that the recently struggling chipmaker is finally beginning to benefit from the giant build-out of artificial intelligence infrastructure. But before we get there, here is a quick look at what the company reported for the first quarter: 

  • Adjusted EPS 29c vs. 13c y/y, beating estimate 1.0c
  • Revenue $13.58 billion, +7.2% y/y, beating estimates of $12.36 billion
    • Intel Products revenue $12.78 billion, +8.7% y/y, beating estimate $11.53 billion
    • Client Computing revenue $7.73 billion, +1.3% y/y, beating estimate $7.1 billion
    • Datacenter & AI revenue $5.05 billion, +22% y/y, beating estimate $4.41 billion
    • Intel Foundry revenue $5.42 billion, +16% y/y, beating estimate $4.81 billion
    • All Other revenue $628 million, -33% y/y, beating estimate $605.3 million
    • Intersegment eliminations revenue -$5.25 billion, -12% y/y
  • R&D expenses $3.38 billion, -7.3% y/y, beating estimate $3.18 billion
  • Adjusted gross margin 41% vs. 39.2% y/y, beating estimates of 34.5%
  • Adjusted operating income $1.67 billion vs. $690 million y/y, beating estimate $386.2 million
  • Adjusted operating margin 12.3% vs. 5.4% y/y, beating estimate 3.08%

The Intel Foundry Services division - the company’s factory unit - generated revenue of $5.4 billion, up 16%. That unit currently relies almost exclusively on Intel product divisions for orders, though it is seeking outside customers. Its PC chip division had revenue of $7.7 billion, and the data center unit posted sales of $5.1 billion. All of those totals topped Wall Street estimates.  Gross margin was 41% on an adjusted basis. When Intel was at the height of its powers, it regularly reported margins north of 60%. It predicted a margin of 39% in the current period.

Commenting on the results, CFO David Zinsner said that “we remain focused on maximizing our factory network to improve available supply and meet our customers’ needs throughout the year.“

CEO Lip-Bu Tan chimed in: “The next wave of AI will bring intelligence closer to the end user, moving from foundational models to inference to agentic. This shift is significantly increasing the need for Intel’s CPUs and wafer and advanced packaging offerings." 

While Q1 results were solid, especially at the data center level, it was the Q2 forecast that caught the market's attention: 

  • Revenue will be $13.8 billion to $14.8 billion in the quarter ending in June, beating estimates of $13 billion.
  • Adjusted EPS will be about 20 cents a share, also beating estimates of 9 cents.
  • Margin is projected to rise to 39.0%, 

The upbeat outlook suggests that CEO Lip-Bu Tan is making progress on a challenging comeback plan. After lining up major investments in Intel last year which helped to strengthen the company’s balance sheet - Thursday’s results suggest he’s now delivering on a promise to improve its operations. 

The earnings report shows that the need for data center chips to power the massive AI expansion is lifting demand for Intel’s flagship Xeon server processors. That type of generalist semiconductor is a renewed focus for companies trying to turn their AI software into services that bring in revenue.

In an interview with Bloomberg, Tan said Intel delivered a “solid result” that was ahead of its projections. He expects the strong demand for processors used in AI systems to expand and said the company is “laser-focused” on increasing output from Intel’s factories, which still can’t produce enough to fill all its orders. 

“There is huge demand,” Tan said. “We are working very hard with our team to make sure we deliver, that we meet that demand but we are still short because the demand keeps increasing from the customers.

And, as Bloomberg notes, for now Intel has also been able to navigate another challenge the PC industry is facing: memory-chip shortages.

To be sure, the company has a long way to go to restore its former chip-industry glory. Its annual revenue of $53 billion last year was roughly $25 billion shy of the company’s peak revenue, achieved in 2021, when the stock was far lower. Wall Street projects 3% growth in 2026.

Red-hot demand for server products has lured memory suppliers into concentrating on the high-speed processors for those machines. That’s cut into production of standard products used in phones and personal computers, meaning fewer of those mass-market devices are being built and the prices are going up.

In addition to making progress on production, Tan has restored Intel’s balance sheet via outside investments - to the point where the company bought back part of a factory in Ireland that it had been forced to sell to raise cash. That purchase was seen as a sign of future confidence by investors. Adding to the optimism, Tesla CEO Elon Musk said Wednesday that he will use Intel technology as part of his effort to build an in-house chip manufacturing plant. Tan declined to provide further details on the relationship.

Finally, Intel said it would spend more than originally budgeted on capex, according to CFO Dave Zinsner. The company has plenty of factory space and will add more machines to fill it out, he said. Capital expenditures will now be about flat from where they were last year. Intel had earlier said it planned to reduce its outlay. 

In response to the strong earnings and guidance, Intel shares rose 14% in extended trading. The stock had gained 81% this year before the results were released, closing at $66.78. This has now pushed the company's fwd PE well above 100x.

With the 14% surge after hours, Intel stock has finally surpassed its dot com bubble high of $74.88 hit in August of 2000.

As Shay Boloor writes, "all it took was a CPU shortage, AI agents, SpaceX + TSLA terafabs and a bit of help from the U.S. government + NVDA." 

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