The AI PC story is picking up speed, with global semiconductor revenue expected to top $1 trillion for the first time in 2026. This jump is driven mostly by strong AI demand, with the Computing & Data Storage segment alone forecast to grow 41.4% year-over-year (YOY) and pass $500 billion. On top of that, Gartner expects worldwide AI spending to hit $2.59 trillion in 2026, a 47% increase from the prior year.
Intel (INTC) does not want to be left behind in that kind of market. It is pushing major PC makers in the U.S., China, and Taiwan to move to its most advanced 18A-process chips, including the Panther Lake and Wildcat Lake platforms, as demand for top-tier processors starts to run ahead of supply on the best manufacturing nodes.
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Wedbush Securities sees this as a smart way for Intel to protect its margins by guiding customers toward higher-value, premium-priced chips.
Will this proactive push into next-generation chips finally deliver the sustainable margin expansion and revenue growth investors are craving, or is it merely a tactical defense in a hyper-competitive market?
Intel’s Messy Earnings Picture
Intel is based in Santa Clara, California, and designs, manufactures, and sells microprocessors, chipsets, and related computing platforms for PCs, data centers, and newer AI-focused devices around the world.
INTC has a year-to-date (YTD) gain of 220.26% and a 52-week return of 471.17%.
The company now has an equity value of $598 billion, and its trailing price-to-earnings multiple of 1,846.67 times and trailing price-to-cash-flow multiple of 59.91 times are far above sector medians of 25.06x and 18.35x.
Their latest quarterly report, for the period ended March 26, showed revenue of $13.58 billion versus analyst estimates of $12.39 billion, which worked out to 7.2% YOY growth and a 9.6% beat. It also delivered adjusted earnings per share of $0.17 compared with an estimate of -$0.10, producing a +270.00% surprise.
INTC posted adjusted operating income of $1.67 billion, versus a $397.4 million analyst estimate, and Intel turned that into a 12.3% adjusted operating margin, suggesting the higher-end product mix is already helping.
