Monday, September 16th 2024

Pat Gelsinger Writes to Employees on Foundry Momentum, Progress on Plan

All eyes have been on Intel since we announced Q2 earnings. There has been no shortage of rumors and speculation about the company, including last week's Board of Directors meeting, so I'm writing today to provide some updates and outline what comes next. Let me start by saying we had a highly productive and supportive Board meeting. We have a strong Board comprised of independent directors whose job it is to challenge and push us to perform at our best. And we had deep discussions about our strategy, our portfolio and the immediate progress we are making against the plan we announced on August 1.

The Board and I agreed that we have a lot of work ahead to drive greater efficiency, improve our profitability and enhance our market competitiveness—and there are three key takeaways from last week's meeting that I want to focus on:
  • We must build on our momentum in Foundry as we near the launch of Intel 18A and drive greater capital efficiency across this part of our business.
  • We must continue acting with urgency to create a more competitive cost structure and deliver the $10B in savings target we announced last month.
  • We must refocus on our strong x86 franchise as we drive our AI strategy while streamlining our product portfolio in service to Intel customers and partners.
We have several pieces of news to share that support these priorities.
Amazon Web Services selects Intel Foundry
Today we announced that we will expand our strategic collaboration with Amazon Web Services (AWS). This includes a co-investment in custom chip designs, and we have announced a multi-year, multi-billion-dollar framework covering product and wafers from Intel.

Specifically, Intel Foundry will produce an AI fabric chip for AWS on Intel 18A. We will also produce a custom Xeon 6 chip on Intel 3 that builds on our existing partnership, under which Intel produces Xeon Scalable processors for AWS. More broadly, we expect to have deep engagement with AWS on additional designs spanning Intel 18A, Intel 18AP and Intel 14A.

This framework reflects the power of our "better together" strategy, anchored on our integrated portfolio across foundry services, infrastructure and x86 products. And with the 5N4Y finish line in sight, we are beginning to see a meaningful uptick in interest from foundry customers. This includes continued momentum in advanced packaging, which remains a meaningful differentiator for Intel Foundry as we have tripled our deal pipeline since the beginning of the year.

U.S. Secure Enclave award
Earlier today, we also announced that Intel has been awarded up to $3B in direct funding under the CHIPS and Science Act for the U.S. government's Secure Enclave program. This program is designed to expand the trusted manufacturing of leading-edge semiconductors for the U.S. government. As the only American company that both designs and manufactures leading-edge logic chips, we will help secure the domestic chip supply chain.

This news, combined with our AWS announcement, demonstrates the continued progress we are making to build a world-class foundry business.

Greater independence for Intel Foundry
To build on our progress, we plan to establish Intel Foundry as an independent subsidiary inside of Intel. This governance structure will complete the process we initiated earlier this year when we separated the P&L and financial reporting for Intel Foundry and Intel Products.

A subsidiary structure will unlock important benefits. It provides our external foundry customers and suppliers with clearer separation and independence from the rest of Intel. Importantly, it also gives us future flexibility to evaluate independent sources of funding and optimize the capital structure of each business to maximize growth and shareholder value creation.

There is no change to our Intel Foundry leadership team, which continues to report to me. We will also establish an operating board that includes independent directors to govern the subsidiary. This supports our continued focus on driving greater transparency, optimization and accountability across the business.

A more focused and efficient Intel Foundry will further enhance collaboration with Intel Products. And our capabilities across design and manufacturing will remain a source of competitive differentiation and strength.

A more efficient Intel Foundry manufacturing buildout
A key priority for Intel Foundry is to increase our capital efficiency. Our manufacturing investments across three continents have laid the foundation for a world-class foundry for the AI era. Now that we have completed our transition to EUV, it's time to shift from a period of accelerated investment to a more normalized cadence of node development and a more flexible and efficient capital plan.

We will maintain our Smart Capital approach to maximize financial flexibility as we complete our manufacturing buildout, making some adjustments to the near-term scope and pace of our manufacturing expansion.
  • We recently increased capacity in Europe through our fab in Ireland, which will remain our lead European hub for the foreseeable future. We will pause our projects in Poland and Germany by approximately two years based on anticipated market demand.
  • Malaysia remains an active design and manufacturing hub through our existing operations. We plan to complete the construction of our new advanced packaging factory in Malaysia but will align the startup with market conditions and increased utilization of our existing capacity.
  • There are no changes to our other manufacturing locations. We remain committed to our U.S. manufacturing investments and are moving forward with our projects in Arizona, Oregon, New Mexico and Ohio. We remain well-positioned to scale up production around the world based on market demand as we grow our foundry business.
A stronger Intel Products portfolio focused on x86
We are also taking actions to strengthen and streamline our Intel Products portfolio, where we have identified clear opportunities to drive greater focus, speed and efficiency.

Our top priority is to maximize the value of our x86 franchise across client, edge and data center markets, including with a broader range of custom chiplets and other customized offerings that meet emerging customer needs, as demonstrated by today's AWS announcement.

Our AI investments—including continued leadership of the AI PC category, our strong position with AI in data center, and our accelerator portfolio—will leverage and complement our x86 franchise with a focus on enterprise, cost-efficient inferencing.

Alongside this, we are taking steps toward simplifying our portfolio to unlock efficiency, accelerate innovation and deliver more integrated solutions.

This includes moving our Edge and Automotive businesses into CCG, where we have a big opportunity to leverage our core client business and extend our leadership in the AI PC category to a wide range of vertical edge solutions. In NEX, we will be focusing the business on networking and telco. And we are moving Integrated Photonics Solutions into DCAI as we focus on driving a more focused R&D plan that's fully aligned with our top business priorities.

In addition, we are integrating our Software and Incubation business into our core business units to foster more integrated roadmaps, unlock efficiencies and create value.

An engine of financial performance
Collectively, these changes are critical steps forward as we build a leaner, simpler and more efficient Intel. And they build on the immediate progress we have made since announcing our plan on August 1 to create a more competitive cost structure.

Through our voluntary early retirement and separation offerings, we are more than halfway to our workforce reduction target of approximately 15,000 by the end of the year. We still have difficult decisions to make and will notify impacted employees in the middle of October. Additionally, we are implementing plans to reduce or exit about two-thirds of our real estate globally by the end of the year.

As we continue acting with urgency to execute the plan we announced last month, we are also working to carefully manage our cash as we meaningfully improve our balance sheet and liquidity. This includes through selling part of our stake in Altera—which is something we have talked about publicly several times and has long been part of our strategy to generate proceeds for Intel on Altera's path to an IPO.

All eyes will remain on us. We need to fight for every inch and execute better than ever before. Because that's the only way to quiet our critics and deliver the results we know we're capable of achieving.

We must maintain our focus on innovation while also becoming an engine of operational efficiency and financial performance that's built to win in the market.

As I've said before, this is the most significant transformation of Intel in over four decades. Not since the memory to microprocessor transition have we attempted something so essential. We succeeded then—and we will meet this moment and build a stronger Intel for decades to come.

On behalf of the entire ELT and our Board of Directors, thank you for all you're doing. I greatly appreciate your patience, grit and resilience as we do the hard work needed to deliver on our plan and position our company for the future.

Pat
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37 Comments on Pat Gelsinger Writes to Employees on Foundry Momentum, Progress on Plan

#26
R0H1T
This was always way too overambitious, especially coming after Covid. China's expanding their "homegrown fabs" at an unprecented rate, and India too, although we're way behind for now. Anyone thinking making 10~20 fabs at bleeding edge with some demand tapering, if not worse, was totally unexpected probably's sniffing Intel's cheap glue!

And yes, China could likely overtake the installed capacity of TSMC+Intel combined in the next few years.
Posted on Reply
#27
iameatingjam
NoyandThey went from 130k to 110k. Big yikes
Yeah, intel is bloated. I know they also make the chips, well did/plan to in the future/ whatever. Still, their employee count compared to AMD is striking.
Posted on Reply
#28
R0H1T
Probably too much of upper/middle managers, and yes men trying to please the bean counters! I don't even remember the last big thing from Intel post AVX512 unless you count copying ARM's big.LITTLE as innovation?
Posted on Reply
#29
Assimilator
R0H1TAnd yes, China could likely overtake the installed capacity of TSMC+Intel combined in the next few years.
Not leading-edge nodes, though.
Posted on Reply
#30
redeye
so stock buy back was a good idea?… not.
R0H1TThis was always way too overambitious, especially coming after Covid. China's expanding their "homegrown fabs" at an unprecented rate, and India too, although we're way behind for now. Anyone thinking making 10~20 fabs at bleeding edge with some demand tapering, if not worse, was totally unexpected probably's sniffing Intel's cheap glue!

And yes, China could likely overtake the installed capacity of TSMC+Intel combined in the next few years.
but Taiwan is a “part” of China… a distinction with a difference…
in the future (i guess) China does the “big” stuff, Taiwan does the “little” stuff, and INTEL does the stuff that can be done while playing around… “really guys, were not just foolin’ around we have press releases!… were really workin’…)
Posted on Reply
#31
Dragokar
Vayra86I think there's a good chance Germany isn't all that worried about this either, with their recent budgettary issues...
Depends on how and who is looking at it xD
Posted on Reply
#32
Count von Schwalbe
Nocturnus Moderatus
AssimilatorNo it's not. The extra money you pay a cloud provider is money you save by not having buy hardware. Or hire a network specialist. Or a security expert. Or a devops engineer. Or having to replace your entire hardware stack every 3 years because it's now longer fast enough. Or having to deal with a firmware update that bricks every SSD on every node in your production cluster and your site is down for a week.
Mostly economies of scale, IMHO. Get big enough you run it all yourself.

Still a data center I guess, but self hosted. Edge computing is a dying breed.
Posted on Reply
#33
_roman_
mb194dcEven reviewing games at 720p with a 4090 doesn't seem to be fooling people now.
That is a methodical choice. Feel free to think about why it's done. There are other gaming benchmarks also just for the raw numbers in the common resolutions.
Posted on Reply
#34
dyonoctis
AssimilatorSo literally every cloud application that already exists is "insufficient"?


They will if it's the only possible one.
You also can't ignore the fact that on-device processing is getting pushed for select A.I processing where cloud latency makes for a bad UX. Software companies are spending R&D money to take away some processing from the cloud :
Gemini Nano - Google DeepMind
It reminds me of the discussion about EV everywhere for everyone and only EV. Some technologies can be an upgrade for some people if the environment is favorable but for everyone else? This is going to be a downgrade.

Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that nobody can benefit from cloud processing, just that I don't see it becoming a one-size-fits-all solution. Phones and tablets are actually getting insanely powerful for their size, while network infrastructures aren't really seeing blistering progress in speed/latency/range. It's getting better. But slowly. Faster network interfaces also have an impact on powerdraw for mobile devices. Total Cloud for office workers in a first-world country, is easy peasy, for a mobile device though? To me, it's looking like this will be hella expensive and a logistical headache.

The hybrid model just looks like the simpler solution
Posted on Reply
#36
Wirko
btarunrA subsidiary structure will unlock important benefits.
Subsidiary means hunting for subsidies ... how come we didn't understand that earlier?
Posted on Reply
#37
Steevo
No new products at Intel, CEO writes strongly worded email expressing displeasure.

What is this garbage?
Posted on Reply
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Dec 11th, 2024 22:54 EST change timezone

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