pwshub.com

Where Will Intel Stock Be in 1 Year?

With shares down 60% in 2024, Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) highlights the importance of diversifying your holdings in the stock market. The technology giant now trades at levels unseen since 2012 -- erasing over a decade of investor returns so far this year. But is the sell-off overblown? Let's discuss what the next 12 months could bring.

What went wrong for Intel?

Founded in 1968 and rising in prominence during the PC boom of the 1990s and 2000s, Intel was the quintessential American chipmaker. The company specializes in consumer and enterprise central processing units (CPUs), which can be considered the brain behind a computer. Like many American tech companies, it also began investing more in AI-related hardware following the release of ChatGPT in late 2022.

Intel seemed to have all the characteristics of a blue-chip stock. Its business was large, established, and usually profitable. However, disastrous second-quarter earnings turned this narrative upside down.

Revenue declined by around 1% year over year to $12.83 billion, which isn't the end of the world. However, management expects revenue to fall 8% in the third quarter. The bottom line was even more dismal, with net income declining from $1.47 billion to a loss of $1.65 billion, driven by weakness in Intel's foundry business, which manufactures chips.

Surprisingly, some underperformance also came from Intel's pivot to AI. While the core client computing segment (which sells chips for consumer PCs) grew 9% to $7.41 billion, the company's data center and AI segment dropped by 3% to $3.05 billion amid rising competition from rivals like Advanced Micro Devices and Qualcomm. Unlike Nvidia, which bolsters its economic moat with software solutions like Cuda, Intel seems poorly differentiated in the AI hardware market.

What could the next year bring?

Intel is failing where others are succeeding. And investors should ask if leadership is to blame. The company has been shuffling through executives quickly, which could hurt its long-term planning. CEO Patrick Gelsinger replaced Bob Swan in 2021, who replaced Brian Krzanich in 2019. After these disastrous results, Gelsinger might not last much longer. But if he does leave, he won't be the only one.

As part of its recovery strategy, Intel plans to lay off 15,000 workers and stop non-essential work to save $10 billion in costs in 2025.

A person looks nervously at a stock chart.

Image source: Getty Images.

Cost-cutting looks like the right move. If Intel can achieve these goals, it could find itself in a much better financial position over the next 12 months -- just in time to execute growth opportunities with new AI PC chips like Lunar Lake, designed to boost battery life and performance to compete with rival Arm-based chips from Apple and Qualcomm.

Intel's lumbering foundry business will take longer to fix because the company has fallen behind Asian rivals like Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing in semiconductor fabrication. That said, Intel is a natural beneficiary of the U.S. government's efforts to nearshore chipmaking technology, earning massive subsidies such as almost $20 billion in CHIPS and Science Act funding this year. This support will benefit investors by helping Intel save on capital expenditures over the coming decades.

Is Intel stock a buy?

Intel looks capable of quickly stabilizing its losses and returning to growth through cost-cutting and new opportunities like AI PC chips. And over the longer term, its struggling foundry business could return to prominence with the help of significant government support.

That said, with a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) multiple of 85, Intel stock looks far too expensive to be considered a buy. Shares will likely continue to underperform over the next 12 months, and investors may want to wait before considering a position in the stock.

Should you invest $1,000 in Intel right now?

Before you buy stock in Intel, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Intel wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $774,894!*

Stock Advisor provides investors with an easy-to-follow blueprint for success, including guidance on building a portfolio, regular updates from analysts, and two new stock picks each month. The Stock Advisor service has more than quadrupled the return of S&P 500 since 2002*.

See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of August 26, 2024

Will Ebiefung has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Advanced Micro Devices, Apple, Nvidia, Qualcomm, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing. The Motley Fool recommends Intel and recommends the following options: short November 2024 $24 calls on Intel. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Where Will Intel Stock Be in 1 Year? was originally published by The Motley Fool

Source: finance.yahoo.com

Related stories
1 month ago - Semiconductor giant Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) was expecting demand in its core markets to pick back up in the second quarter, but that demand failed to...
1 month ago - The global sell-off in stock markets deepened as US unemployment hit a three-year high amid growing fears that the US Federal Reserve has left it too late to begin cutting interest rates.
1 month ago - Intel Corp. today confirmed reports from earlier this week that it will cut a significant number from its massive global workforce, saying it plans to lay off about 15,000 workers, or 15% of its total. The disclosure came on the back of...
1 month ago - Among Walmart, Nvidia, Amphenol, Chipotle Mexican Grill, Mitsui, Williams-Sonoma, Broadcom, MicroStrategy, Cintas, Sirius XM, Lam Research, and Sony Group, there's a historically cheap stock to buy and two dangerous bubble stocks readying...
1 month ago - (Bloomberg) -- Intel Corp. said third-quarter revenue will disappoint and announced more than 15,000 job cuts, after the company lost business to rivals better equipped for the artificial intelligence boom. Shares fell more than 18% in...
Other stories
6 minutes ago - Ransomware has quickly grown into a multi-billion-dollar industry, forcing a shift in how cybersecurity is approached, including the development of solutions such as Mandiant Threat Intelligence. In the last five years, as profits for...
6 minutes ago - There is disruption underway in the cloud industry itself as businesses begin to look outside of the major providers to support private artificial intelligence and AI cloud services. The growth of AI has led to a need for infrastructure...
6 minutes ago - The reach of enterprise technologies such as artificial intelligence has permeated every business operations area. Given the resulting explosion in organizational data generation and reliance, the surface for cyberattacks has expanded....
6 minutes ago - Deepgram Inc., the developer of a speech recognition engine that provides its service via application programming interfaces, today announced a powerful addition to its platform that enables natural-sounding conversations between humans...
35 minutes ago - Trump maintains a roughly 60% stake in Trump Media & Technology Group, which trades on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol "DJT."