‘Don’t Bet the Farm,’ Cautions Analyst as Intel’s Comeback Story Fizzles Out

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Intel (INTC) has ticked all the boxes to earn the title of a disappointing stock. While it has shown signs of a potential recovery at times this year, it’s still down more than 34% over the past twelve months. And the longer-term picture looks even worse—it’s lost over 65% of its value in the last five years. Staying neutral on INTC stock seems like the most prudent strategy.

Protect Your Portfolio Against Market Uncertainty

One full-service investment bank, Seaport Global, just initiated coverage on INTC with a Sell recommendation and a price target of $18. Seaport’s analysis pointed to several challenges Intel faces, including losing its manufacturing edge, which has led to its products struggling against competitors. More worrying were concerns regarding the financing of Intel’s Foundry services and internal manufacturing, which is projected to require around $100 billion over the next three years.

A big reason for Intel’s poor performance is its slow adoption of more advanced manufacturing technologies, which has left it trailing key competitors that have moved faster on both performance and efficiency.

Intel (INTC) vs. S&P 500 (SPY)
Intel (INTC) vs. S&P 500 (SPY)

So, at a time when AI is booming — and Intel arguably had everything it needed to be a major player—it has struggled operationally. Instead of leading, the company’s been forced to take a step back and get its house in order, trying to play catch-up in the long term under the direction of its new leadership.

Earnings Blues Haunt INTC

Once again, the most recent earnings were underwhelming. Intel’s earnings call highlighted a solid start to the fiscal year, with revenue and EPS exceeding guidance, driven by strong sales of Xeon and Raptor Lake processors. Under new leadership, the company is implementing strategic cost reductions and a cultural transformation.

Intel (INTC) estimated and reported revenues history
Intel (INTC) estimated and reported revenues history

However, macroeconomic uncertainties, ongoing losses in the foundry segment, capacity constraints, and competitive pressures present significant challenges. Weak guidance didn’t help, either, failing to spark any real enthusiasm in the market.

Given the updated projections and some aggressive assumptions, I would argue Intel is trading with no margin of safety. That puts a lot of pressure on the turnaround story. In my view, Intel is a Hold—a stock investors are better off staying away from for now.

Intel Focuses on Efficiency While Growth Takes a Back Seat

Intel, which recently reported its earnings results, reaffirmed that it’s still transitioning, prioritizing cost discipline over growth. This was the first quarter under the new CEO, Lip-Bu Tan, and the company is clearly working through execution issues, with a long road ahead to recovery.