Key Takeaways
- Intel shares have climbed 220% during the past year, featuring a 58% jump across nine straight winning sessions
- New CEO Lip-Bu Tan, appointed in March 2025, eliminated over 20,000 positions and restored positive free cash flow
- Nvidia committed $5 billion to Intel last September, with plans for Intel to manufacture custom x86 server CPUs for Nvidia systems
- TD Cowen lifted its target price from $50 to $60 on April 9 while maintaining a Hold rating due to valuation questions
- Certain analysts project potential for $150 per share — approximately 140% above current levels — assuming margin improvement and revenue expansion
Intel shares have delivered the kind of performance that captures investor attention. Before Tuesday’s session, the semiconductor giant concluded a nine-session winning streak that added 58% to its value. Looking back across 12 months, shares have appreciated 220%.
Shares retreated 2.1% on Tuesday, settling at $63.81. Following such a powerful advance, a modest pullback appears normal.
Investors now face a critical question: does this rally have further to go, or have the biggest gains already been captured?
Intel’s story begins with understanding how dramatically the company had declined. Shares touched a multiyear bottom under $18 in June 2025, trading below book value, following years of manufacturing missteps, missed opportunities in mobile computing, and the industry’s pivot toward GPUs from traditional CPUs. The corporation that generated over $10 billion in operating profit during 2000 on $34 billion in sales posted a $2.2 billion loss in 2025 despite $53 billion in revenue. Five successive chief executives struggled to reverse course.
Leadership Change Drives Transformation
Lip-Bu Tan assumed control in March 2025, immediately implementing sweeping changes. He eliminated more than 20,000 positions, dramatically reduced cash consumption, and returned Intel to positive free cash flow during the second half of 2025. This represents a substantial turnaround from the cumulative negative $44 billion in free cash flow the company consumed between 2022 and 2025.
Tan brings proven turnaround expertise. During his 12-year tenure leading Cadence Design Systems, that company’s stock appreciated over 3,200%.
Intel has forged active collaborations with Alphabet focusing on AI and cloud infrastructure. The company will also support Elon Musk in constructing and running “Terafab,” a semiconductor manufacturing joint venture involving SpaceX and Tesla.
The Nvidia arrangement stands out as particularly significant. Last September, Nvidia invested $5 billion in Intel, which will manufacture custom x86 server CPUs designed to work alongside Nvidia’s GPUs. Melius Research analyst Ben Reitzes observed: “The demand for the x86 server CPU has gone through the roof at hyperscalers.”
Valuation Concerns Create Debate
At present price levels, Intel trades at approximately 95 times projected earnings for the next 12 months. This multiple exceeds those of Nvidia, Taiwan Semi, Broadcom, and AMD. This comparison presents challenges for valuation.
Earnings currently sit at cyclical lows. Projected EPS for 2026 hovers around 50 cents, down sharply from nearly $5.50 in 2021. Gross margins during 2025 fell below 40%, compared with 55% at Taiwan Semi and 75% at Nvidia. Some of this gap stems from Intel currently paying Taiwan Semi to produce roughly 30% of its wafers while expanding internal fabrication capacity.
Manufacturing yields on Intel’s latest process technology also trail competitors. Taiwan Semi achieves estimated yields around 90%; Intel operates near 70%. Narrowing this difference would generate substantial additional cash flow.
TD Cowen increased its price objective to $60 from $50 on April 9 while keeping its Hold rating. The firm identified Intel’s reduced exposure to Taiwan Semi capacity constraints as a near-term advantage for server CPU demand, though stated that valuation — approximately 63 times 2027 EPS — appears difficult to support.
Roughly one in five analysts following Intel rates the stock as a Buy, considerably lower than the 55% average for S&P 500 constituents. Reitzes, who upgraded to Buy in January with a $75 target, represents the bullish camp. He envisions a possible trajectory to $150 assuming Intel achieves $7 in EPS by 2029 and commands a typical semiconductor sector multiple.
Intel’s market capitalization stands at $320 billion — trailing AMD’s $415 billion, even though Intel generates 50% more revenue.

