HomeBusinessCan Intel Stock Help You Become a Millionaire?

Can Intel Stock Help You Become a Millionaire?

Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) was once considered a stable long-term investment in the semiconductor market. But over the past decade, the chipmaker’s shares have fallen 26%. Even with dividends reinvested, it delivered a negative total return of 4%.

During the same period, the S&P500 increased by 192% and generated a total return of 250%. AMD‘S (NASDAQ: AMD) The share rose as much as 5,220%. Let’s take a look at why Intel stock has withered – and whether it has the potential to bounce back and generate millionaire-making profits in the future.

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Image source: Getty Images.

Intel is still the world’s largest producer of x86 central processing units (CPUs) for PCs and servers. But according to PassMark Software, Intel’s share of the x86 CPU market shrank from 82.2% to 61% between the fourth quarter of 2016 and 2024. AMD’s share doubled from 17.8% to 35.7%.

Intel ceded the market to AMD as it struggled with production delays, chip shortages and shifting strategies under three different CEOs. Intel manufactures most of its chips in its own foundries, but AMD outsources all its production to third-party foundries, such as TSMC and Samsung.

In recent years, Intel has fallen behind TSMC and Samsung in the “process race” to produce smaller, more compact and more energy-efficient chips. Intel’s problems started with a difficult transition from 14nm to 10nm chips (2017-2020), and then worsened with even more delays in the subsequent transition to 7nm chips (2020-2023). While Intel was tripping over its own feet, AMD was developing a new generation of Ryzen CPUs for PCs and Epyc CPUs for servers. TSMC pumped out those chips in time, and many of Intel’s old customers started turning to AMD’s chips instead.

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Intel also failed to gain a foothold in the mobile chip market, and its CPUs became less relevant than Nvidia‘s graphics processing units (GPUs) in the booming AI market. Missing these two key technology shifts indicated that Intel had lost its lead in the chip manufacturing market.

Pat Gelsinger, who became Intel’s CEO in 2021, initially rejected the idea that it should follow AMD’s lead, divest its foundries and become a “fabulous” chipmaker. Instead, Gelsinger doubled down on Intel’s foundry expansion, chased government subsidies and claimed it could catch TSMC by 2025.

But at the same time, Intel quietly outsourced some of its production to TSMC to relieve pressure on its own foundries. Even with that help, Intel struggled to ramp up production of its latest Meteor Lake chips last year as the development of new AI-powered CPUs compressed gross margins.

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