Is Intel Stock a Buy Now?

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It’s been a tough year for Intel (NASDAQ: INTC). Its stock price has been essentially cut in half since Jan. 1 and it was booted out of the Dow Jones Industrial Average index in November. To add insult to injury, the company Intel tried to buy in 2005, Nvidia, has gone on to become the second-largest company in the world (based on market cap) and replaced it in the Dow.

But a new year is just around the corner, and with it comes the potential for change. Is Intel poised to rebound in 2025?

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A quick look at Intel’s Q3 numbers shows why the stock has been struggling. The chipmaker saw a 6% year-over-year decline in sales while flipping from adjusted earnings per share (EPS) of $0.41 last year to a per-share loss of $0.46 this year. The semiconductor company’s biggest issue is its third-party foundry business, which it launched in 2021 to help drive growth. Instead, it has been piling up losses.

In Q3, its foundry business saw revenue decline by 8% year over year to $4.4 billion, while the division’s operating losses ballooned to $5.8 billion from $1.8 billion a year ago. The results included a $3.1 billion impairment charge. But even without the impairment, the loss still would have jumped to $2.7 billion.

Moving forward, the company is working to turn its foundry business into an independent subsidiary, which it thinks will help better serve customers and allow for outside funding. It could also be a precursor to the company eventually looking to spin off the business.

Intel expects the foundry business’s operating loss to improve next year as it moves to new nodes with better cost structures and realizes cost savings from its restructuring plans. However, the business got some bad potential news when The New York Times reported that the Biden administration was looking to reduce the $8.5 billion CHIPs Act grant the company was supposed to receive, while awarding rival Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing a $6.6 billion grant to build foundries in the U.S. It was revealed on Tuesday that Intel will actually get $7.86 billion. The slightly lower amount was on top of the $3.3 billion Intel has already been awarded through a Department of Defense contract that used CHIPs Act funding.

Outside of its foundry business, Intel’s other businesses have been a mixed bag. On the positive front, its data center and artificial intelligence (AI) segment performed well last quarter, with revenue increasing 9% year over year to $3.3 billion. This is well below the growth of most companies in the data center space, and the company said its Gaudi 3 AI accelerator would not meet 2024 revenue targets.

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