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Intel May be Worth More Than Current Valuation if Split Into Pieces

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Investing.com -- Intel may be worth more separated into smaller entities than the chipmaker is at its current valuation, according to analysts at Northland Capital Markets.

Shares in Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) have plunged by more than 52% so far this year, as the firm struggles to keep up with rivals like Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) in the race to manufacture artificial intelligence-optimized chips.

"Intel Products continues to lose market share and lacks a competitive AI product," the Northland analysts said in a note to clients on Tuesday.

In August, Intel said it plans to slash capital expenditures by 17% versus the prior year to $21.5 billion, and unveiled a third-quarter forecast that missed analysts' estimates. It has also announced cuts to more than 15% of its workforce, or roughly 17,500 people, and said it would suspend its dividend in the fourth quarter as part of a broader turnaround effort.

Chief Executive Pat Gelsinger and key executives, meanwhile, are reportedly mulling a possible split of Intel's product-design and manufacturing businesses as part of a bid to revive the company's fortunes, Bloomberg News has reported.

Elsewhere, Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM) has approached Intel over a possible takeover bid, with Chief Executive Cristiano Amon actively examining various options for a deal for the more than five-decade-old group, Reuters reported in September. Qualcomm executives have mulled potentially acquiring parts of Intel's design business, including its PC design division, Reuters added.

Infrastructure chipmaker Marvell (NASDAQ:MRVL) has also become a possible buyer of Intel's programmable chip business, Altera, Reuters said.

"While discouraging, we believe Intel, broken up into pieces, is worth more than its current valuation," the Northland analysts said.


 
I agree, I think you can look at Intel and come to a conclusion that the Fab business is a negative on the valuation. In my view, if Intel completely stopped making it's own chips and outsourced all fabrication to TSMC it would be more valuable.
 
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