I guess what I wonder is how much did Intel intend to spend in order to reach the 15B in external revenue? I am guessing that Intel can not service 15B in additional external revenue without increasing the number of lines and fabs.... is that correct?All that has changed based on the lack of traction. the goal was 15B in external revenue. Add that to internal and IFS makes sense.
and If intel is going to claim packaging as foundry, then you need to add in ASE and AMKOR.
Intel needs 15B in external revenue to make the finances make sense. The plan was 2030 for this. There is not line of sight to get there yet. Our model is that if ALL of the speculated commitments came true, they are about halfway to goal.
The intermediate goal should be to be a top 10 foundry in external revenue (wafer fab) and Top 5 packaging house in external revenue.
Agree completely.So to answer your question: Intel (and AMD) needs to prioritize revenue, profit, and the quality of revenue above everything else. Market share is still important, but it is becoming increasingly misleading. If Intel can generate $30 billion in annual revenue while earning $10 billion in net profit, isn’t that far better than Intel’s 2025 result of $52.9 billion in revenue with only $300 million in net profit?
While I would agree that Intel's "Have it All ways at once" approach was God Awful Expensive, and that moving production back to Intel from TSMC would be a MORE profitable (or less loss) path, it isn't like the spending at IFS ends there. There will be insane amounts of money to be spent on new equipment to keep up with TSMC (I know they have already purchased some High NA equipment to try to regain the lead in the future) and also insane amounts of money spent on new processes.Just FYI, Adjusted for one time charges, 2024 Operating Loss would be also mid 50s% only.
Now lets ask what happened in 2023,2024 & 2025? Intel started outsourcing a significant % of its wafers to TSMC. Intel management said about 30% of outsourced wafer at a peak. Also they had high node ramping\starting costs for Intel 4, Intel 3, Intel 18A due to accelerated node development process.
That ramp has slow down and its effect on operating loss will go away as they will use incremental nodes for future products 18A ->18A-P->18A-U etc, eventually 14A ramp cost will show up but not before 2027 per CEO commentary.
Now with Panther Lake wafers coming back mostly internal and Nova lake will be improving on that, so this operating loss % will come back down over time. As yield improves on 18A & Intel 3 and as volume ramps up on 18A & Intel 3, I expect this loss to move towards to 0% (break even). This is evident in Q1'2026, margin improved 10% QoQ. We will see how this metric progresses over the next 8 quarters & if Intel can achieve 0% as originally targeted. (Exiting 2027 with Intel Foundry breakeven on operating profit basis)
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In 2021/2022, Intel foundry had 0% gross margin and still negative operating margins because it was being operated as an IDM foundry (Wafers sold to products at cost with no profit motive). When Products team started souring wafer from TSMC, Intel Foundry gross margin turned negative (mainly because of underutilization & high startup costs), ofc operating margin became even more negative. Now with foundry charging market prices to Intel Products team, Foundry P&L is mainly dependent on wafer volume. It does not matter internal or external. If they can completely decouple from TSMC and still effectively compete with 100% wafer at Intel Foundry, that is a good thing for Intel Foundry P&L.
With TSMC capacity constrained due to being too conservative, I think more and more customers are looking at Intel Foundry seriously and that threshold of wafer volume required for Intel Foundry to flourish is not too far away.
Your point about the insatiable demand for high end chips is spot on though. This puts even more emphasis on Intel not trying to eat the whole pie at once. They need to create a profitable business with sustained growth. The rest will take time, but this should be the benchmark they are first targeting.
