Company Overview

Intel has been the semiconductor sector’s most persistent disappointment story for the better part of four years. While Nvidia surged thousands of percent on AI demand, Intel struggled through manufacturing delays, leadership changes, billions in foundry losses, and a stock that spent most of 2024 and 2025 near multi-decade lows. That narrative began shifting dramatically last week — and the moves of the past six days have been the most significant validation of Intel’s turnaround thesis that the market has seen.

On June 11, Bank of America analyst Vivek Arya double-upgraded Intel to Buy from Underperform — a rare two-notch jump that analysts reserve for moments when the thesis they were betting against has definitively broken — and lifted his price target to $135 from $96. The stock surged 9.27% that day to close at $116.96. Then, Intel shares climbed again on Friday, closing up 6.51% at $124.57 on reports that Google has ordered over three million Tensor Processing Units from Intel Foundry for 2028 — one of the largest confirmed external foundry orders in Intel’s history. Today, the stock is trading higher again, testing the upper range of its 52-week high of $132.75, with investor sentiment continuing to reprice Intel’s foundry potential. The turnaround story that seemed implausible 12 months ago is suddenly running on institutional momentum, confirmed order flow, and an analyst community scrambling to revise estimates upward.

Key Technical and Fundamental Drivers

Rare Double Upgrade → BofA Skips from Sell to Buy in One Move
Bank of America’s Vivek Arya double-upgraded Intel to Buy from Underperform on June 11, lifting the price target to $135 from $96, citing higher confidence in Intel’s ability to supply leading-edge wafers and advanced packaging at a time when the entire industry is running short on capacity. The same analyst also pointed to a much larger market opportunity as AI workloads shift toward agentic computing, in which CPUs play a larger role, and significantly raised his earnings estimate — now modeling Intel capable of hitting more than $6 in earnings per share by 2030, up from a prior estimate of $3 to $4. A double-upgrade from one of the most closely followed semiconductor analysts on Wall Street is not routine. It signals a fundamental thesis reversal, not incremental optimism.

Google TPU Order → 3 Million Chips, 2028 Delivery
Reuters reported that Alphabet’s Google has ordered over three million Tensor Processing Units from Intel Foundry, with delivery targeted for 2028. This is the validation the foundry business has needed — a hyperscaler with deep pockets and real AI chip demand entrusting Intel with a major production run. Nvidia is also reportedly evaluating Intel products for future chips, though that has not been confirmed. The Google order alone represents a meaningful revenue event for a foundry division that generated just $1.1 billion in 2026 — and it signals that the capacity concerns driving hyperscaler diversification away from TSMC are real enough to send the world’s most demanding chip customers to Intel’s manufacturing lines.

Foundry Revenue Model → $1.1 Billion in 2026 to $47.1 Billion by 2030
Bank of America now models Intel’s foundry revenue growing from $1.1 billion in 2026 to $47.1 billion by 2030, driven by Apple M-Series wafers, MediaTek TPU wafers, Terafab IP and packaging, ARM-based server CPUs, and edge AI expansion. The bank also flagged Intel’s server CPU sales reaching more than $40 billion by 2030, representing roughly 25% share of a $170 billion-plus total addressable market. Whether these projections prove accurate will be determined over years — but they represent a radically different analytical framework than the one that had BofA at Underperform just weeks ago, and institutional repositioning around a revised model tends to drive meaningful price action before the fundamentals fully arrive.

18A Manufacturing Node → The Credibility Test in Production
Intel’s upcoming 18A manufacturing process is the key technical milestone that will prove or disprove the foundry thesis at the leading edge. Analysts pointed to the Cadence 14A node IP sign-up and Terafab engagements as supportive data points that help build longer-term foundry visibility and a more sustainable IP ecosystem. CEO Lip-Bu Tan, who presented at Computex 2026 in Taipei earlier this month, has been credited with refocusing the company on manufacturing excellence and external customer relationships — a cultural shift that BofA’s Arya cited as central to his revised thesis. The 18A yield data expected in the second half of 2026 will be the next hard checkpoint.

Geopolitical Tailwind → U.S.-Based TSMC Alternative
Intel’s latest rally is getting attention as investors start to see more than just a PC and server-chip turnaround story — the stock is now trading on bets Intel can become a U.S.-based alternative to TSMC in high-end foundry work. In a world where the U.S. government, major hyperscalers, and defense customers are all seeking to reduce semiconductor supply chain dependence on Taiwan, Intel is the only credible domestic alternative at the leading edge. CHIPS Act funding, Defense Department procurement preferences, and hyperscaler supply chain diversification all create a structural tailwind that didn’t exist in Intel’s prior era of foundry attempts.

Market Takeaway

Intel’s six-day run from $107 to testing its 52-week high near $132 is the market repricing a thesis in real time. The BofA double-upgrade broke the spell of institutional skepticism that had kept the stock range-bound for years. The Google TPU order confirmed that external customers are not just entertaining Intel Foundry — they are signing contracts. And the agentic AI CPU narrative gives Intel a credible path to relevance in the AI era that didn’t exist when the prevailing story was that GPU clusters had made CPUs irrelevant.

The honest tension is that Intel already trades above its consensus analyst target, with the stock’s move so fast that most of Wall Street’s targets are now below where INTC trades — a pattern that demands discipline. The last quarter showed red ink on trailing earnings, ongoing foundry losses, and high execution risk at the 18A and 14A nodes — risks that haven’t disappeared simply because sentiment has shifted. The foundry revenue model BofA is projecting — growing 40x in four years — is an extraordinary claim that requires extraordinary execution. Yield rates at 18A, customer ramp timelines, and competition from TSMC’s own expansion plans are all variables that could compress that projection materially. For traders watching Tuesday’s session, the key dynamic is whether the momentum from last week’s upgrade and Google order news continues to attract institutional buyers, or whether the stock needs to consolidate its 25%+ six-day run before the next leg. A clean hold above $120 — the level it was testing at the close of Friday’s session — would be the technical confirmation that the breakout has institutional support rather than just short-term momentum.