Intel has staged one of the most spectacular rallies in recent market history. In just eight trading days, the stock surged over 60%, adding more than $100 billion in market value. From one of the worst performers in the S&P 500 to one of the best — within two weeks.
The catalyst: Intel's entry into Elon Musk's Terafab project, a $50 billion initiative to build the world's largest chip factory on American soil. Add to that the announcement of a new custom chip contract and speculation about a strategic investment from Broadcom.
But after a 60% rally, the critical question arises: Is Intel fairly valued now — or has the market priced in too much euphoria?
The Fundamentals: Still Deep in the Red
Let's forget the headlines for a moment and look at the raw numbers. Intel's revenue last quarter was $14.3 billion — a 7% year-over-year decline. Gross margins have fallen below 40%, compared to over 55% just three years ago. The foundry division is burning cash — operating losses of over $2 billion per quarter.
The P/E ratio is meaningless due to low earnings. On a price-to-sales basis, Intel trades at about 3.5 — historically high for a shrinking company.
Terafab: Game-Changer or Risk?
The Bull Case: If Intel 18A works and Terafab is delivered on schedule, Intel could become a serious competitor to TSMC in the foundry business. The US government has a strategic interest and should provide additional subsidies. The total addressable market for foundry services exceeds $100 billion.
The Bear Case: Intel has missed almost every technological deadline over the past five years. Intel 18A is not yet in mass production. TSMC has a three-generation lead. No major customer has placed a significant foundry order with Intel.
Broadcom Speculation: Break-Up as Value Creation
Rumors about a strategic investment or acquisition by Broadcom provide additional tailwinds. The thesis: Intel gets split into two parts — Intel Products and Intel Foundry Services. Valued separately, the two parts could be worth more than the combined company.
Valuation Scenarios
Bull Case ($85-100): Intel 18A works, Terafab built on time, first major foundry customers secured, Broadcom invests. Intel gets valued as a national champion.
Base Case ($55-65): Terafab built with delays. Intel 18A works partially. Foundry reaches break-even at earliest 2028. Stock consolidates.
Bear Case ($30-40): Intel 18A disappoints. Broadcom deal falls through. Terafab becomes a money pit. Stock gives back the entire rally.
Our Verdict
The rally is understandable — Intel had real catalysts. But after 60% in eight days, the stock is no longer cheap. For investors who bought below $40: take partial profits. For new entrants: wait for a pullback to the $50-55 range. Intel is a turnaround story — and turnarounds require time and patience, not FOMO.
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