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Intel stunned markets on April 23-24, 2026 after reporting stronger-than-expected Q1 results and forecasting a second-quarter revenue range of $13.8bn–$14.8bn.
Q1 revenue was $13.6bn, up about 7% year‑on‑year; Data Center & AI sales rose to $5.1bn (≈22% y/y). The company posted non‑GAAP EPS of $0.29 and a GAAP loss (about $0.73/share) reflecting significant restructuring and goodwill charges.
Intel Foundry revenue increased to $5.4bn, though most foundry sales remained internal and external foundry customers were modest.
CEO Lip‑Bu Tan said a shift from model training to inference and “agentic” AI has revived demand for CPUs, boosting Xeon orders and prompting partnerships and investments — including deals with Google, Nvidia, SoftBank, a U.S. government 10% stake, and participation in Elon Musk’s Terafab project.
Intel also repurchased a minority stake in its Ireland Fab 34.
Shares jumped roughly 15–20% in after‑hours trading, adding tens of billions in market value.
Management cautioned that supply constraints (memory, wafers, substrates) and heavy foundry losses mean capacity and margin risks remain as the company scales production.
🔗 Based On
🕰️ The Story So Far: An Evolving Timeline
Friday, April 24, 2026 02:58 UTC
Intel forecasts strong AI-driven revenue surge
Thursday, April 23, 2026 02:02 UTC
Intel beats Q1 estimates; lands Tesla for 14A
Wednesday, April 22, 2026 17:52 UTC
Intel Faces Supply Constraints Ahead of Q1 Earnings







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