Intel stock jumps as Q3 earnings beat expectations, AI drives chip demand

Intel (INTC) stock jumped as much as 7% after the bell Thursday as the chipmaker reported third quarter earnings and revenue that topped Wall Street’s expectations.

Intel reported $13.7 billion in revenue for the three months ended Sept. 27, higher than the $13.15 billion expected by analysts tracked by Bloomberg and $13.28 billion the previous year. The chipmaker said that adjusted earnings per share was $0.23, above the $0.01 projected by Wall Street. The company reported a loss of $0.46 during the same period in 2024.

CEO Lip-Bu Tan said in a statement that “AI is accelerating demand for compute and creating attractive opportunities across our portfolio,” including the company’s closely-watched, struggling manufacturing business and its products.

“We believe we’re well-positioned to play a more significant role in AI,” added Intel’s head of investor relations John Pitzer in an interview with Yahoo Finance.

Intel makes CPUs, or traditional computer chips, used alongside AI chips in data center servers to power artificial intelligence software. Its CPUs are also used in computers including AI PCs.

The company said it expects fourth quarter adjusted EPS of $0.08, less than the $0.10 per share estimated by analysts, per Bloomberg consensus data. The chipmaker forecasts revenue of $13.3 billion at the midpoint of its projected range, below the $13.4 billion expected.

Intel said its fourth quarter guidance was below analyst estimates because the company’s projections don’t include revenue from Altera —a semiconductor firm owned by Intel that the company partly divested in the third quarter.

Intel’s third quarter results follow a slew of high-profile investments from the US government, Nvidia (NVDA), and SoftBank (9984.T). The government took a 9.9% stake in the chipmaker in late August, while Nvidia’s $5 billion investment amounted to a 4% ownership stake. The investments bolstered both Intel’s balance sheet and investor hopes for a turnaround under new chief executive Lip-Bu Tan.

Still, analysts and investors have said those investments do little to change the state of Intel’s struggling third-party manufacturing segment. Intel has always manufactured its own chips, but it opened up the business to outside customers in 2021.

Intel’s manufacturing arm, Intel Foundry Services, reported an operating loss of $2.3 billion for the third quarter, wider than the $2.2 billion expected but an improvement from the $5.8 billion loss in the previous year.

Creative Strategies principal analyst Ben Bajarin told Yahoo Finance that, overall, Intel’s results Thursday were cause for “cautious optimism,” but looking ahead, “all eyes move to foundry.”

Intel headquarters. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
Intel headquarters. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images) · Justin Sullivan via Getty Images

Wall Street fears that heavy spending on the relatively new segment may not pay off. So far, the business has failed to attract substantial commitments from outside customers. Policymakers, however, are heavily invested in the company’s success due to its geopolitical significance: Most of the world’s computing chips are made in Taiwan, and Intel is the only US-based, large-scale advanced semiconductor manufacturer.

Complicating the path ahead for the business is the fact that Intel is no longer promoting its latest 18A chip production process as a way to attract outside customers. Initial reports indicated both Nvidia and Broadcom (AVGO) were testing the technology, but deals with the firms have failed to materialize.

Instead, Intel has shifted to primarily using 18A for its own internal products, including its Core Ultra series 3 chips for consumers and its Xeon 6+ next-generation data center chip, which is slated to launch in the first half of 2026.

Intel is now focusing on attracting customers through its next-generation advanced manufacturing process, dubbed 14A.

Intel’s Pitzer told Yahoo Finance, “[W]e are very pleased by the feedback we’re getting with early customer engagements. Quite frankly, where we are today on 14A is absolutely ahead of where we [were] at a similar point in time in the 18A development.”

StockStory aims to help individual investors beat the market.
StockStory aims to help individual investors beat the market.

Daniel Howley contributed reporting.

Laura Bratton is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Bluesky @laurabratton.bsky.social. Email her at laura.bratton@yahooinc.com.

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