Friday, August 30th 2024
Report: Intel Could Spin Out Foundry Business or Cancel Some Expansion Plans to Control Losses
According to a recent report from Bloomberg, Intel is in talks with investment banks about a possible spin-out of its foundry business, as well as scraping some existing expansion plans to cut losses. As the report highlights, sources close to Intel noted that the company is exploring various ways to deal with the recent Q2 2024 earnings report. While Intel's revenues are in decline, they are still high. However, the profitability of running its business has declined so much that the company is now operating on a net loss, with an astonishing $1.61 billion in the red. CEO Pat Gelsinger is now exploring various ways to control these losses and make the 56-year-old giant profitable again. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are reportedly advising Intel about its future moves regarding the foundry business and overall operations.
The Intel Foundry unit represents the biggest consumer of the company's funds, as the expansion plans across the US and Europe are costing Intel billions of US Dollars. Even though the company receives various state subsidies to build semiconductor manufacturing facilities, it still has to put much of its capital to work. Given that the company is running tight on funds, some of these expansion plans that are not business-critical may get scraped. Additionally, running the foundry business is also turning out to be rather costly, with Q2 2024 recording a negative 65.5% operating margin. Separating Intel Product and Intel Foundry may be an option, or even selling the foundry business as a whole is on the table. Whatever happens next is yet to be cleared up. During the Deutsche Bank Technology Conference on Thursday, Pat Gelsinger also noted that "It's been a difficult few weeks" for Intel, with many employees getting laid off to try to establish new cost-saving measures.
Source:
Bloomberg
The Intel Foundry unit represents the biggest consumer of the company's funds, as the expansion plans across the US and Europe are costing Intel billions of US Dollars. Even though the company receives various state subsidies to build semiconductor manufacturing facilities, it still has to put much of its capital to work. Given that the company is running tight on funds, some of these expansion plans that are not business-critical may get scraped. Additionally, running the foundry business is also turning out to be rather costly, with Q2 2024 recording a negative 65.5% operating margin. Separating Intel Product and Intel Foundry may be an option, or even selling the foundry business as a whole is on the table. Whatever happens next is yet to be cleared up. During the Deutsche Bank Technology Conference on Thursday, Pat Gelsinger also noted that "It's been a difficult few weeks" for Intel, with many employees getting laid off to try to establish new cost-saving measures.
113 Comments on Report: Intel Could Spin Out Foundry Business or Cancel Some Expansion Plans to Control Losses
Bad news. Best of luck to them, whatever comes.
The gift that keeps on giving.
But honestly, we should probably pray that Intel gets their process nodes figured out. Or Samsung catches up or someone else comes in (SMIC?) which is very unlikely. There is TSMC, Intel is falling behind and Samsung has already fallen behind. Of course there is a big market even when on nodes that are not cutting edge and business won't stop for them but if we as enthusiasts want to have newer and cooler CPUs and GPUs there also needs to be both capacity and competition in the cutting edge of manufacturing space.
Ironic coming from a company who had total dominance for years.
Generally, TSMC needs competition. Both Intel and Samsung chases them and are not that far behind actually. Tables should turn in the 2-4 years. Tons of US and EU companies wants chip production out of Asia. Thats the reason even TSMC is building US and EU fabs. Intel only builds in US an Europe for this exact reason.
Intel 18A is Intels most important node ever. Already sampling. Testing. Improving yields. This is equivalent of TSMC 3nm, maybe even 2nm (as in the optimized 3nm node)
Arrow Lake using 3nm TSMC is a stop gap solution before Intel will be up and running fully on 18A and beyond. AMD already loses "leadership" here, back to being behind on node, for the first time in many years. As both Zen 5 and Zen 5 3D will be using 4nm which is 5nm in reality.
TSMC is the reason Zen became a succes (eventually). Zen sucked when AMD used GloFo for chip production. Intel has been competing with node-disadvantage for years and still has competitive performance. How will it look when Intel gets node-advantage? We will see very soon. Arrow Lake releases in October. Zen 5 disappointed so far and 9000X3D was delayed till 2025.
Perfect timing for Intel.
Intel also delivers better all-round performance than AMD. AMD needs 3D cache to be competetive in gaming, sadly 3D chips are mediocre outside of gaming. Also dual CCD chips are mediocre for gaming, beat by the single CCD counterpart. This is the reason I own 7800X3D and not 7950X3D. Pointless. I only game on this rig. I do work on serverclusters, not at home.
Intels biggest problem has been power usage, which should be fixed by going TSMC 3nm and eventually 18A.
Intel's stock not at $3 yet
Nvidia don't even use TSMCs prime-nodes, even tho they can afford it. They will in 2025 tho. Blackwell - both AI and consumer - is 4nm again, just like 4000 series and Hopper. They don't need to rush to 3nm, they already dominate using a cheaper node.
The only companies to use 3nm TSMC is Apple and soon Intel.
I don't see AMD using 3nm before late 2025 / early 2026. They don't have the funds. Spent 5 billions on ZT Systems recently. They are chasing AI, trying to make a dime and moon like Nvidia stock.
RDNA5 on 3nm (or better) is the next big thing from AMD. Lets hope they can deliver 4090/5080 performane by then. They will not touch 5090 at all, even tho Nvidia gets a 1+ year headstart.
RNDA4 will be another joke. 4/5nm with mid-end focus.
3D cache is great example of a way to increase performance by touching architecture. You get higher gaming performance than i9-14900K with 1/5th of wattage. That's the way.
It's not like AMD needs the 3D cache that saves them, otherwise Intel is best ... That can be said the other way around: Intel needs insane clocks, voltages and wattage to save them in gaming ...
It's about the innovation that AMD did and that brough them success. Hybrid architecture brought Intel success, but past Alder Lake those extreme wattages brought Intel only problems.
Dual CCD chips are not intended for gaming. AMD's gaming chips are (apart from 3D) x600X(T), x700X(T) and x800X(T).
I would not call anything in range of 7600X, 7700X, 9600X, 9700X, 7800X3D mediocre in gaming.
9600X sits just 5% below best that Intel has to offer, at a fraction of that i9's power and price.
Now with branch prediction fix it is even faster. Even 7600X might surpass i9-14900K's gaming performance while not degrading/burning out.
AMD chips have been crippled by 3 years now, because their architecture was not properly utilized by the OS. However, tests with Intel chips does not show the same result.
Arrow Lake is said to lower TDP (compared to 14th Gen) by a 20-25%. Intel needs invention that will help them 7800X3D performance at like 100 Watts or even lower.
From PCGH:
Quite the difference with your 5%, right?
Release of the Apple iPhone
Release of the Nvidia Tesla C870 GPU Computing Module
Release of AMD Zen architecture
Intel and computer enthusiasts alike never could understand the ramifications of the above three at the time. Some are still in denial.
Edit: More importantly, Intel cannot ‘win’ back it’s past market performance like it did after the release of the Core architecture. The fundamentals of the business have changed irrevocably and Intel doesn’t have a viable business strategy to run all those expensive fabs just for it’s own products.
You can see how X3D chips are better thanks to much larger cache, so they don't have to access DDR4/5 so often.
:toast:
With Intel you can get both good gaming perf and good application perf in the same chip. You don't have to choose one over the other. Downside is power usage, however, not in gaming. 14700K uses like 100 watts on average in gaming.
3nm TSMC will fix Intels power consumption issues, their performance have been fine even with AMD having node advantage. Lets see what Intel can do with node-advantage.
Arrow Lake and eventually 18A is going to be the turning point for Intel. AMD lost node advantage, and Zen 5 somewhat failed - However 9800X3D might take the gaming crown anyway, due to being unlocked for OC and running higher clocks in general. 3D cache is less fragile this time.
too bad TSMC had other plans...
We will never have a healthy innovative market that thrives off competition as long as one player that gets ahead becomes complacent and thinks they ‘deserve’ the market regardless of current and future performance.
Such a company truly becomes a cancer that takes enormous resources to cut out and suppress.
Big part of Intels financials are because they have been spending big on new fabs, which are soon up and running everywhere
Tables are turning very shortly, all big tech companies want chip production out of Asia, and Intel is the best bet in doing so, and they will soon open their foundries up for business
Intel can be making AMD CPUs and GPUs in a few years :laugh:
AMD relies 100% on TSMC for now
AMD consider Samsung tho
I guess TSMC milks them too hard, so hard that AMD can't afford to use 3nm but had to settle with 4nm aka 5nm for a brand new ground up CPU design
Can't wait to see Zen 5 (optimized 5nm aka 4nm) vs Arrow Lake (true next gen 3nm)
If Intel fail, no problem, I will grab a 9800X3D ASAP
If Intel don't fail, I will be using a 285K in less than 2 months - just in time for RTX 5090 release