Intel Foundry Is Still Struggling to Win Customers

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Intel disclosed that commitments to its Intel 18A process remain minimal.

  • Most foundry revenue will remain internal as the company struggles to turn test chips into large-scale contracts.

  • The launch of Panther Lake on Intel 18A could help sell the process technology to potential customers.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Intel ›

There have been a few high-profile customer wins for Intel's (NASDAQ: INTC) nascent foundry business and its flagship Intel 18A manufacturing process, including deals with Microsoft and Amazon to produce future chips. The company has also won some business for its advanced packaging technology, and revenue from this will start to pick up in the second half of 2025.

For the time being, however, almost all foundry revenue is going to be internal as the company struggles to win major commitments from customers.

Semiconductor wafers.
Image source: Getty Images.

Mostly internal revenue

At a recent conference, Intel CFO David Zinsner provided some details on how the Intel 18A process was going. Intel 18A is currently in risk production, which involves real-world production runs at low volumes, and the process is scheduled to ramp up in volume later this year.

Intel's own Panther Lake family of PC CPUs, set to launch by the end of 2025, will account for the vast majority of volume on the Intel 18A process. Answering a question from an analyst about committed volumes on Intel 18A or the upcoming Intel 14A process, Zinsner said that "committed volume is not significant right now, for sure."

Reuters reported in April that several customers were planning to build test chips on Intel's advanced manufacturing processes. However, not all customers that go through with test chips end up committing to full-scale production. "[A]nd then we get test chips, and then some customers fall out in the test chips, and then there's a certain amount of customers that kind of hang in there," Zinsner explained.

This throws some cold water on recent rumors indicating that Intel had won some major commitments for Intel 18A. A report from a South Korean media outlet suggested that Microsoft had signed a large-scale contract with Intel Foundry and other major tech giants were interested, as well. While Intel is likely talking to plenty of potential customers, it doesn't appear that any major contract has been signed based on Zinsner's comments.

A path to profitability

While Intel's own products will generate the bulk of its foundry revenue for now, the bar to reach foundry profitability isn't all that high. Zinsner disclosed that if the company can achieve low- to mid-single-digit billions in external foundry revenue, the foundry business would reach breakeven.