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IntelINTCDON'T BUYJun 09, 2015Stock price when the opinion was issued
As of Jun 16, 2026. Market Open.
Since the current CEO took over a year ago, shares have rallied 321% and has given earnings surprises. This is one of the greatest turnarounds he's ever seen. Their high-end CPUs are essential to data centres. In a time of chop shortages, Intel has been building its US capacity. Their latest quarter was super, and they can't keep up with demand.
He didn't trade it this week as it made new highs. He bought it last December at $40. Last Friday, it was in the $80s and held because momentum looked great. Next week, he may trade or do a covered call. It's a trade now. Sometimes you let it run--gosh, he hasn't seen a run like this.
He didn't trade it this week as it made new highs. He bought it last December at $40. Last Friday, it was in the $80s and held because momentum looked great. Next week, he may trade or do a covered call. It's a trade now. Sometimes you let it run--gosh, he hasn't seen a run like this.
For semiconductor exposure, she prefers NVDA, AVGO, and QCOM -- higher-quality ways to play the space. What INTC makes is strategically important to the US government.
The turnaround is real. Earnings and EPS for Q1 blew out of the water. Unique tailwind of US government taking 10% share. Trading right around analysts' target, so don't be surprised by a pullback. On her watchlist.
Be cautious. Very expensive. About 100x PE on this year's earnings. Discounting a lot of good news and flawless execution for next several years. Owns massive fabrication plants (fabs); unlike NVDA, which designs chips but then pays others to build them.
New strategy to build new fabs, but let competitors use them -- wants to become second-largest foundry by 2030. Government investment is positive. Stock's gotten ahead of itself.
Tricky. A buy, but price is a bit ahead of fundamentals. Driven by news around US government supporting it. Still a ways to go on its turnaround, but encouraging that US government and NVDA are involved. Still trying to optimize manufacturing capacity, while everyone else is expanding. Lots of wood still to chop.
For her, it always falls short on upside. But she wouldn't be opposed to an investor buying here, especially on the pullback.
The former CEO nearly ran Intel into the ground with ambitious plans to build semis factories. but the new CEO got a bailout from Washington which bought a stake in the company. Shares rose last September and has made higher highs and higher lows ever since. On the chart, the MACD line is flashing buy. The On Balance Volume is steadily marching higher. But the RSI is in overbought territory. Lang targets $55 and eventually the high-$60s.
Thinks they will continue to struggle. The major product they are selling into is still the big mother load of computer chips for computers. Arm Holdings (ARMH-Q) have been eating their lunch. Computer sales are way down. It looked like they were making good inroads into the tablets and phone markets, but it turns out they were actually subsidizing a lot of those sales.