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Why I Doubled Down on Lip-Bu when he Joined Intel?

Daniel Nenni

Admin
Staff member
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Lip-Bu visiting the late 9th President of Israel, Shimon Peres, during the good old Cadence Design Systems days.

Erez TsurErez Tsur LinkedIn

Years ago, when Lip-Bu Tan took the CEO role at Cadence, I was there. The company was broken — morale low, trust shaken — and the stock sat around $2.42/share.

I still remember the day he left the CEO office: the stock closed near $205.24 — an 85× climb. I had plenty of those early shares to sell — which, at a certain point, I did — and I’m certainly grateful.

So when Lip-Bu took the helm at Intel this March, I didn’t hesitate.
I called my broker and bought shares at $22.44.

Why?

Because I’ve seen his playbook firsthand — humble, honest, and laser-focused on delighting the customer. He works side-by-side with engineers, not through layers of managers. And this time, he even invested $25 million of his own money — that tells you something.

It wasn’t easy at the start — turnarounds never are — and when things got rough, I doubled down. My broker wasn’t exactly thrilled, to say the least.

Today, Intel trades around $37 — roughly a 65% gain from when I first bought in at $22.44. It’s still challenging, but in parallel, global semiconductor sales increased by 21.7% year over year in August 2025, so optimistic.

I’m not an analyst or an expert — and this may not be another Cadence story — but I’ve learned enough to recognize a leader worth believing in when I see one.

* At the first Intel shareholders’ meeting under his leadership, Lip-Bu rejected a shareholder proposal that would have required a discussion about the company’s operations in Israel.
 
Also something to note LBT is against selling the foundry and foundry is the reason Intel is maintaining it's share. Also i hope he checks with customers cause some customer are pricing Intel products too high than their value. My biggest concern with LBT is the laying off of OSS developers.
 
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