Gelsinger's comments offended TSMC, which did not honor discount
Revenue and stock price have declined sharply under Gelsinger
Intel's 18A chip process faces delays and technical issues
Oct 29 (Reuters) - Pat Gelsinger took the reins as Intel CEO three years ago with hopes of reviving the American industrial icon. He soon made a big mistake.
Intel had a sweet deal going with Taiwan’s TSMC the giant manufacturer of semiconductors for other companies. TSMC would make chips that Intel designed but could not produce. And it was offering deep discounts to Intel, say four people with knowledge of the agreement.
Reuters: Special Report: Inside Intel, CEO Pat Gelsinger fumbled the revival of an American icon
Revenue and stock price have declined sharply under Gelsinger
Intel's 18A chip process faces delays and technical issues
Oct 29 (Reuters) - Pat Gelsinger took the reins as Intel CEO three years ago with hopes of reviving the American industrial icon. He soon made a big mistake.
Intel had a sweet deal going with Taiwan’s TSMC the giant manufacturer of semiconductors for other companies. TSMC would make chips that Intel designed but could not produce. And it was offering deep discounts to Intel, say four people with knowledge of the agreement.
Reuters: Special Report: Inside Intel, CEO Pat Gelsinger fumbled the revival of an American icon
Intel said it won’t let merger speculation distract it from executing its five-year turnaround plan. Under Gelsinger, Intel said, it has revamped its operations, secured up to $45 billion in U.S. support, led the market for AI PC chips, and “achieved a historic pace” of innovation.
Intel told Reuters its 18A fabrication technologies are yielding good-quality chips and that it “expects to return to process leadership in 2025” with their formal launch. The company said it objects to the “usage of rumors, leaked materials, half-truths and interviews based on the widest net that can be cast for ‘sources’ to gain negative commentary on Intel.”