Times Colonist

Intel shares fall 16.2% over chip troubles

- MICHAEL LIEDTKE

SAN RAMON, California — Intel is falling further behind in the race to build faster and more powerful computer chips, a nagging problem that might force the company to seek help from other manufactur­ers as it scrambles to catch up in the technologi­cal arms race.

The sobering news emerged late Thursday when Intel disclosed that there will be a sixmonth to one-year delay on its developmen­t of a next-generation chip-making process already in use by a major Taiwan supplier, TSMC.

The unexpected snag means Intel’s 7-nanometer processing technology won’t be ready until the end of 2022 or early 2023, raising the possibilit­y that other chip makers will already have taken another leap ahead.

Intel’s stock plunged 16.2 per cent to $50.59 US in Friday trading as investors adjusted to the tectonic shifts that have transforme­d Intel from a trailblaze­r to a laggard in an area of technology that it dominated for decades. The steep drop wiped out $41 billion US in market value and dragged down the Dow Jones industrial average, a market barometer consisting of Intel and 29 other bellwether companies.

Not long ago, the Santa Clara, California, company, was so far ahead of the pack that it was inconceiva­ble that it might ever farm out some of its manufactur­ing to other companies. That’s no longer the case. “The unthinkabl­e may not be that far away when Intel is forced to acknowledg­e that the growing gap between it and the TSMC camp is an insurmount­able chasm, and outsource key parts of its manufactur­ing/ process technology,” BMO Capital Markets analyst Ambrish Srivastava wrote in a research note.

TSMC’s stock surged 9.7 per cent Friday to close at $73.90 in U.S. trading, a sign that Wall Street expects its nextgenera­tion chips to have a clear competitiv­e advantage now that Intel is so far behind in its work.

The dramatic change in fortunes is the latest in a succession of comedowns for Intel, which has been struggling to adapt to the shift from personal computers to mobile devices since Apple released its gamechangi­ng iPhone 13 years ago.

Although the company has remained profitable, its heyday during the PC era was long ago.

While the overall stock market has kept climbing, Intel shares hit their peak of $75.81 almost 20 years ago.

Intel suffered another blow last month when Apple announced it will soon begin relying on its own chips to power its Mac computers instead of Intel’s.

Although he said the company is “not happy” with the delays in its next-generation chips, Intel CEO Robert Sway sought to reassure analysts during a Thursday conference call.

“Obviously, this year has been an incredibly challengin­g year on multiple fronts, but at the same time, we expect 2020 to be the best year in our company’s history,” Swan said.

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