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Intel raises forecast amid robust chip sales after profit surges 42% in Q3

- By JAY GREENE and MICAH MAIDENBERG

INTEL Corp overcame its challenges in meeting red-hot demand for computer chips, posting 19% growth in revenue and signalling another strong quarter ahead.

The chip maker’s profit surged 42% despite the company facing a raft of obstacles, including delays rolling out a new generation of more densely packed processors, as well as its continuing search for a chief executive after Brian Krzanich left abruptly in June.

Intel said last month that surprising growth in the market for personal computers was pressuring its factory network. But that strong demand turned out to be a positive as well. Intel has focused manufactur­ing capacity on servers and higher-end PCs, and that boosted revenue and profit.

Intel reported revenue of US$19.16bil in the third quarter, up from US$16.2bil a year earlier and more than the US$18.1bil expected by analysts, according to FactSet.

Net income rose to US$6.4bil. On an adjusted basis, Intel’s profit came to US$1.22 a share, well more than the US$1.10 expected by analysts, according to FactSet. Profits were helped by a tax rate of about 10% in the third quarter, down from 24% last year.

Intel doesn’t expect the solid demand for its chips to abate anytime soon. Its fourth-quarter forecast for revenue of about US$19bil topped Wall Street’s estimate, and the company now expects sales of US$71.2bil for all of 2018, up from its prior forecast of US$69.5bil.

Intel has been without a full-time CEO since Krzanich resigned for violating company policy by having a relationsh­ip with a co-worker. Finance chief Bob Swan, who has been filling in as CEO, reiterated in an interview on Thursday that he isn’t interested in the job full time.

“Nothing has changed,” he said. He said the board is searching for a successor “with a sense of urgency,” but that it hasn’t put a timetable on making a pick.

In the absence of a full-time chief, Intel has had to grapple with a vexing shortage of processors to meet the PC demand.

Global PC shipments rose 1.4% in the second quarter – the first increase in six years – and ticked up 0.1% in the third quarter as corporate customers bought PCs running Windows 10, replacing older models, according to research firm Gartner Inc.

Swan said Intel was “struggling to keep up” with demand, but declined to estimate the amount of revenue Intel has missed out on.

He said the company is building out capacity to handle the surge. Intel increased its capital-spending plans by US$1.5bil to US$15.5bil this year to address the need.

Sales for the company’s segment that serves the PC market rose 16% from a year earlier to US$10.23bil. Sales in its data-center segment, Intel’s second-largest unit and a strong profit driver, increased 16%.

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