The Phnom Penh Post

Intel unveils plans to spend $20B on two new US chip plants

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US CHIP titan Intel Corp on March 23 said it will invest $20 billion in building two new plants in the state of Arizona as part of a plan to ramp up production in the US and Europe.

The move comes as a global chip shortage has countries and companies in those regions looking to reduce reliance on plants in Asia for semiconduc­tors, which are used in a growing array of products such as cars.

Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo said in a statement: “Intel’s investment will help to preserve US technology innovation and leadership, strengthen US economic and national security, and protect and grow thousands of high-tech, highwage American jobs.”

Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger announced the investment during a webcast about the company’s strategy, as it faces pressure to come up with ways to fend off fierce competitio­n.

He said: “Intel is the only company with the depth and breadth of software, silicon and platforms, packaging, and process with at-scale manufactur­ing customers can depend on for their nextgenera­tion innovation­s.”

Gelsinger stressed that Intel intends to continue doing most of its chip making at its own plants while also building on relationsh­ips with third-party manufactur­ers for some of its product line.

As part of a vision to be a major producer of chips in the US and Europe, Intel is establishi­ng a new manufactur­ing unit called “Foundry Services”, according to the Silicon Valley company.

Moor Insights and Strategy analyst Patrick Moorhead said: “Gelsinger’s disclosure gave me many reasons to believe Intel is ‘back’ if the company can execute its plans.

“The $20 billion doubling down of manufactur­ing is bold.”

Moorhead expected more investment by Intel given the need expressed by the US and European government­s for on-shore, leading-edge chip making.

“This isn’t Intel hedging its manufactur­ing bets – it looks to me as if the company is allin,” the analyst said of tech giant’s plan.

Intel said it took in $20 billion in revenue during the final quarter of last year, little changed from a year earlier, amid robust sales of personal computers.

The company reported net income of $5.9 billion in the quarter, down a billion dollars from the same period a year earlier.

Intel early this year approved an increased cash dividend of $1.39 per share in what may have been a move to placate activist investor Dan Loeb of Third Point, who has called on Intel to bolster its weakening position in the chip market.

The hedge fund has told the company it should consider outsourcin­g its manufactur­ing operations to keep pace with rivals in the sector such as Taiwan-based TSMC and South Korean giant Samsung.

While Intel remains one of the world’s leading chip companies, it has lagged behind rivals in the fast-growing segment of mobile devices, and its chips are being phased out by Apple, which is developing its own microproce­ssors for its Mac computers.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/AFP ?? Intel is facing pressure to come up with bold ways to fend off fierce competitio­n.
GETTY IMAGES/AFP Intel is facing pressure to come up with bold ways to fend off fierce competitio­n.

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