PCWorld (USA)

Intel addresses processor shortages, CEO hunt after reporting disappoint­ing fourth‑quarter results

Intel heads into 2019 facing a number of challenges.

- BY MARK HACHMAN

Stealing a page from Apple’s recent earnings warning, Intel blamed a lack of demand in China as one of the reasons for reporting healthy fourth-quarter profits that were neverthele­ss less than Wall Street expected.

Intel’s fourth quarter, traditiona­lly the company’s strongest, capped what Intel said was a record-breaking year in terms of revenue. But Intel blamed China, weakness in cloud-computing customers, a weakened modem market, and an inability to manufactur­e enough processors as reasons the company’s revenues did not meet expectatio­ns. Intel’s manufactur­ing woes have been a source of questions since 2018, as has been when Intel will name a replacemen­t for Brian Krzanich, Intel’s former chief executive,

who unexpected­ly stepped down in June of 2018.

Interim CEO Bob Swan addressed both issues, at least in part. Swan predicted that Intel’s manufactur­ing problems, which caused a shortage of its CPUS, would be fixed by the end of the second quarter. And as for a new CEO, Swan said the board would name a replacemen­t “very soon.”

INTEL’S FOURTH QUARTER, BY THE NUMBERS

Intel disappoint­ed Wall Street by reporting $5.2 billion in profits, compared to $18.7 billion in revenue. (Analysts polled by Yahoo Finance had expected earnings per share of $1.22 on revenues of $19.01 billion.) They also expected Intel to forecast $17.37 billion in revenue for the first fiscal quarter, ending in March. Instead, Intel said it expected to book $16.0 billion in first-quarter 2019 sales.

Intel blamed a number of factors, but China was a high-profile scapegoat. Apple had previously blamed for its own earnings warning ( go.pcworld.com/ct19). For the current quarter, Intel sad that a slowdown in China, weaker sales to cloud customers, a weakening NAND flash market, and weaker modem demand contribute­d to the lower fourth-quarter sales. Looking forward, Intel said it sees trade and “macro” concerns intensifyi­ng, especially in China.

Intel’s Client Computing Group saw strong demand for its higher-performanc­e products, including gaming. Intel’s Pc-centric CCG grew 10 percent during the fourth quarter, to $9.8 billion overall. CCG still is Intel’s largest business, though Intel’s Data Center Group continues to climb: the unit reported $6.1 billion, up 9 percent year-overyear. PC volumes, though, fell by 2 percent, which Swan blamed on Intel’s inability to manufactur­e enough chips. “We expected a stronger finish” to 2018, Swan said.

WHAT INTEL’S PROCESSOR SHORTAGES MEAN FOR YOU

Swan told analysts that part of Intel’s inability to meet expectatio­ns has come as the company has struggled to transition to the 10nm manufactur­ing node. Intel spent the

recent CES in Las Vegas describing the company’s wholesale switch to 10nm ( go. pcworld.com/sw10), including Ice Lake, its next-generation processor, which is still on track to ship by the 2019 holiday season, Swan said.

The shortages were and are the most pronounced in the value end of the PC market, as Intel’s strategy is to prioritize Xeon chips for servers—where there are “no shortages,” Swan said—and so-called “big core” products at the high end of the PC market. “Big core” chips like the Core i9 will be prioritize­d over “small core,” mid-range processors, followed by the cheapest “value” chips. Though he didn’t say so explicitly, it appears that Intel’s ceding the low end of the market to rivals such as AMD.

Swan said the total available PC market was essentiall­y flat. The fact that Intel’s PC sales fell by 2 percent, Swan said, was directly tied to the shortages.

In the meantime, Intel appears to be doubling down on its areas of strength— which, not coincident­ally, are where it can turn high profits. Oddball chips like the Core I9-9990XE, which Intel will sell at auction ( go. pcworld.com/9990)— yes, to the highest bidder—indicate that Intel will try and milk its high-end chips for all they’re worth.

Intel’s numbers also indicated two trends in the PC business. Though notebooks are selling well (up 8 percent year-over-year in revenue), they’re not making much money per device (as average sale prices rose 6 percent). Buyers might be buying fewer

desktops, as evidenced by the fact that desktop PC sales grew just 3 percent. But desktop PC prices soared 13 percent, indicating that gamers are investing in their desktop rigs.

FLASH WOES ARE GOOD NEWS FOR CONSUMERS

But what hurt Intel can benefit consumers. Intel cited a weakening market for NAND flash, and forecast that the trend will continue. That’s good news for consumers planning to convert to or invest in SSDS, which should continue to decrease in price.

In the meantime, there’s already been talk of SSD prices plunging throughout 2019, making great deals like this Samsung SSD ( go.pcworld.com/86ev) more common. You’re already seeing 500GB SSDS for about $60 (though some use the SATA interface, rather than the faster NVME).

Swan said that Intel is “not too excited” about being in a commodity flash business, and that the company is seeking differenti­ated roles for flash memory and its Optane technology. A recent example of that strategy was the company’s hybrid flash-optane M.2 card ( go. pcworld.com/0pm2) it showed off at CES.

As for Optane itself, Intel’s message was that it won’t be hampered by one-time partner Micron’s decision to buy up the plant ( go. pcworld.com/klop) that Intel and Micron used to manufactur­e Optane, more genericall­y known as 3D Xpoint. Swan said that a number of products were on tap to take advantage of Optane, though it’s unclear what Intel’s manufactur­ing strategy will be.

Intel executives concluded by saying that they didn’t believe that conditions were that different than a few months ago, in October, when Intel predicted a slightly rosier outlook. This year, 2019, should be another record year of revenue, Swan said—its fourth in a row.

But 2019 should also be a challenge. That guidance includes Intel’s prediction that it will successful­ly fight to protect its position in the face of increased competitio­n, Swan said. Trade issues, a manufactur­ing conversion, and an aggressive AMD all mean that Intel will be fighting to keep its lead.

 ?? IMAGE: INTEL ??
IMAGE: INTEL
 ??  ?? Intel’s first-quarter 2019 numbers aren’t what analysts expected to see.
Intel’s first-quarter 2019 numbers aren’t what analysts expected to see.
 ??  ?? Intel is pinning its hopes on Ice Lake, its upcoming 10nm CPU.
Intel is pinning its hopes on Ice Lake, its upcoming 10nm CPU.
 ??  ?? Intel’s latest Optane innovation combines Optane and flash memory on the same PCB.
Intel’s latest Optane innovation combines Optane and flash memory on the same PCB.

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