Thursday, January 27th 2022

Intel Reports Fourth-Quarter and Full-Year 2021 Financial Results

Intel Corporation today reported fourth-quarter and full-year 2021 financial results. The company also announced that its board of directors approved a cash dividend increase of five percent to $1.46 per share on an annual basis. The board declared a quarterly dividend of $0.365 per share on the company's common stock, which will be payable on March 1 to shareholders of record as of February 7.

"Q4 represented a great finish to a great year. We exceeded top-line quarterly guidance by over $1 billion and delivered the best quarterly and full-year revenue in the company's history," said Pat Gelsinger, Intel CEO. "Our disciplined focus on execution across technology development, manufacturing, and our traditional and emerging businesses is reflected in our results. We remain committed to driving long-term, sustainable growth as we relentlessly execute our IDM 2.0 strategy."
In the fourth quarter, the company generated $5.8 billion in cash from operations and paid dividends of $1.4 billion.
For the full year, the company generated $30.0 billion of cash from operations, paid dividends of $5.6 billion, and used $2.4 billion to repurchase 39.5 million shares of stock.
Fourth-quarter revenue was led by an all-time record quarter for our Data Center Group (DCG), with strong server recovery in enterprise and government. The Internet of Things Group (IoTG) had a record quarter, reflecting strong demand on recovery from COVID-19 impacts. The Client Computing Group (CCG) delivered another $10 billion quarter, proving that PCs are more essential than ever.

Business Highlights
  • Appointed David Zinsner as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, and announced that Executive Vice President Michelle Johnston Holthaus will lead Intel's Client Computing Group.
  • Announced plans to take Mobileye public in the United States in mid-2022 via an initial public offering of newly issued Mobileye stock.
  • Completed the first closing of the sale of our NAND memory business to SK hynix, Inc.
  • Announced initial investment of more than $20 billion to build two new leading-edge chip factories in Ohio, where we are establishing the first advanced semiconductor campus in the "Silicon Heartland" of the Midwest. This will be Intel's first new manufacturing site location in 40 years.
  • Launched the 12th Gen Intel Core processor family, including the all-new 12th Gen Intel Core H-series mobile processors led by the Intel Core i9-12900HK, the fastest mobile processor ever created. The 12th Gen Intel Core family will include 60 processors and more than 500 designs.
  • Announced that Habana Labs' Gaudi AI Accelerators power Amazon EC2 DL1 Instances.
  • Unveiled key packaging, transistor and quantum physics breakthroughs fundamental to advancing and accelerating computing well into the next decade and outlined its path toward more than 10x interconnect density improvement in packaging with hybrid bonding and 30% to 50% area improvement in transistor scaling.
  • Began shipping Intel Arc discrete graphics products (code-named "Alchemist") to OEM/ODM customers, with more than 50 design wins.
  • Released the oneAPI 2022 toolkits to expand features to provide developers greater utility and architectural choice to accelerate computing.
  • Introduced Mobileye updates, including the new EyeQ Ultra purpose-built SoC for autonomous vehicles, plans to deliver what is expected to be the world's first level 4 autonomous vehicle for consumers with Geely's Zeekr brand in 2024, and collaboration with Volkswagen Group and Ford to apply Mobileye's mapping technology in driver assistance systems.
  • Ranked #2 on JUST Capital's 2022 "Just 100" list, which reflects the performance of America's largest publicly traded companies on the issues that matter most in defining just business behavior today
.

Additional information regarding Intel's results can be found in the Q4'21 Earnings Presentation available at:
www.intc.com.

Business Outlook
Intel's guidance for the first quarter includes both GAAP and non-GAAP estimates. Reconciliations between GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures are included below. Our first-quarter business outlook includes an additional week in the first quarter due to 2022 being a 53-week year.
Actual results may differ materially from Intel's Business Outlook as a result of, among other things, the factors described under "Forward-Looking Statements" below.

Earnings Webcast
Intel will hold a public webcast at 2 p.m. PST today to discuss the results for its fourth quarter of 2021. The live public webcast can be accessed on Intel's Investor Relations website at www.intc.com. The Q4'21 Earnings Presentation, webcast replay, and audio download will also be available on the site.

Intel plans to report its earnings for the first quarter of 2022 on April 28, 2022 promptly after close of market; related materials will be available at www.intc.com. A public webcast of Intel's earnings conference call will follow at 2 p.m. PDT at www.intc.com.

Investor Meeting
Intel's Investor Meeting will take place on February 17, 2022, where the company will provide additional information regarding its full-year and long-term outlook and plans. More information about Intel's Investor Meeting can be found at www.intc.com.
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14 Comments on Intel Reports Fourth-Quarter and Full-Year 2021 Financial Results

#1
qcmadness
It is such a bad year for Intel as it delivered the lowest growth among top 10 semi companies.
Posted on Reply
#2
z1n0x
qcmadnessIt is such a bad year for Intel as it delivered the lowest growth among top 10 semi companies.
And competition is only going to get tougher, because China just approved AMD's acquisition of Xilinx.
Posted on Reply
#3
Bomby569
News of the doom of Intel are highly exagerated, they will soon release a GPU that seems capable and even if it isn't it will sell out, and they made great progress with the CPU's, both desktop and laptop (linus just reviewed their new laptops and seem great) are great performers, and they have an advantage over the competition, their own fabs, that can quitely roll out their CPU's without having to overpay to reserve slots (TSMC just increased prices) and can also make a killing by selling the space they don't need, in a market were shortages are getting worst and worst.

And they are pricing their CPU's right, unlike AMD. Remains to see what they do with GPU's but i'm sure they want to disrupt the AMD/Nvidia (that have been constantly firing at their own feet) market as newcomers.
Posted on Reply
#4
TheLostSwede
News Editor
Bomby569News of the doom of Intel are highly exagerated, they will soon release a GPU that seems capable and even if it isn't it will sell out, and they made great progress with the CPU's, both desktop and laptop (linus just reviewed their new laptops and seem great) are great performers, and they have an advantage over the competition, their own fabs, that can quitely roll out their CPU's without having to overpay to reserve slots (TSMC just increased prices) and can also make a killing by selling the space they don't need, in a market were shortages are getting worst and worst.

And they are pricing their CPU's right, unlike AMD. Remains to see what they do with GPU's but i'm sure they want to disrupt the AMD/Nvidia (that have been constantly firing at their own feet) market as newcomers.
Posted on Reply
#5
Bomby569
they were a meme, but got so much better when that big guy joined in, i would say their serious stuff now is some of the best, and i'm assuming they didn't cheated the graphs, and i was really suprised by them.
Posted on Reply
#6
Fatalfury
i guess every semiconductor company will be making higher profits during 2021-2022.
Posted on Reply
#7
Imsochobo
Fatalfuryi guess every semiconductor company will be making higher profits during 2021-2022.
yet, Intel made less :p
Posted on Reply
#8
IdealPC
If Intel now allows the lower end CPU with OC feature, then they will be dominant again...
Posted on Reply
#9
Imsochobo
IdealPCIf Intel now allows the lower end CPU with OC feature, then they will be dominant again...
Opposite of what Intel needs.
Intel needs high profit, they're not a non profit organization, Dominating with 12400 and 12100 is worthless to them if they can't get ASP up and they are suffering and unless they can charge more for chips soon they will not get the money required to modernize fabs and pour money into r&d and keeping investors happy which ultimately rule over the company.

That was the company analysis, now to me as a consumer, with B660 and H610 launch prices starting to come down, it's still too expensive but they are dropping slowly.
They are superb value for money and we all rejoice over it, worthy successor to 3600 :D
Posted on Reply
#10
Cutechri
Bomby569And they are pricing their CPU's right, unlike AMD.
Remember when Intel constantly increased prices with every new Skylake++ generation while bringing effectively no significant performance uplift? AMD increases price once in Zen 3 but actually has the performance to justify it and you all howl and scream. Don't act like Intel has been an angel just because Alder Lake is priced relatively nicely, they had to price it like that.

One thing AMD needs is re-entering the budget segment, the i3-12100F decimates in that area.
Posted on Reply
#11
Why_Me
CutechriRemember when Intel constantly increased prices with every new Skylake++ generation while bringing effectively no significant performance uplift? AMD increases price once in Zen 3 but actually has the performance to justify it and you all howl and scream. Don't act like Intel has been an angel just because Alder Lake is priced relatively nicely, they had to price it like that.

One thing AMD needs is re-entering the budget segment, the i3-12100F decimates in that area.
The 11400F and 12400F say 'hello'.
Posted on Reply
#12
Cutechri
Why_MeThe 11400F and 12400F say 'hello'.
Yeah those too if you really wanna include all of them
Posted on Reply
#13
Bomby569
CutechriRemember when Intel constantly increased prices with every new Skylake++ generation while bringing effectively no significant performance uplift? AMD increases price once in Zen 3 but actually has the performance to justify it and you all howl and scream. Don't act like Intel has been an angel just because Alder Lake is priced relatively nicely, they had to price it like that.

One thing AMD needs is re-entering the budget segment, the i3-12100F decimates in that area.
i couldn't care less who sells me the cheapest most performance value cpu's or when, for what reason. Since 10400 Intel shifted and has been offering much better value for money. Period. I knew that and i still bought and AMD cpu because i found a great sale.

If Cyrix came back from the dead with a better price performance cpu that would be my choice. I couldn't give 2 f's about the brand.
CPU's are hiden, are used to performe a task, i can't even show them off, their only value to me is price and performance.
Posted on Reply
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