Intel results to show if supply chain issues are dimming its AI ambitions


FILE PHOTO: An Intel logo appears in this illustration taken August 25, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

April 21 (Reuters) - ⁠Intel investors on Thursday will focus on its ⁠efforts to sort out supply chain issues that have ‌limited the company's ability to ramp up chip production to meet rising demand from businesses adopting AI-related services.

Intel has warned that supply constraints ​for its server chips that are ⁠used alongside graphics processors made ⁠by companies such as Nvidia will be most acute in ⁠the ‌first quarter before easing in the second.

• Intel is expected to report a 1.9% decline in ⁠first-quarter revenue to $12.42 billion and a near 90% ​drop in ‌adjusted earnings per share, according to data compiled by ⁠LSEG.

• The ​company's data center and AI segment is expected to grow 6.8% to $4.41 billion.

• Intel earlier this month expanded its AI CPU ⁠partnership with Google and joined Elon ​Musk's Terafab AI chip complex project to make processors.

• "Rising demand for CPUs in AI data centers gives the company a ⁠steadier revenue lifeline that's less dependent on the consumer PC cycle," eMarketer analyst Jacob Bourne said.

• Investors will also pay attention to the yields, or the number of good ​chips per silicon wafer, of Intel's 18A ⁠manufacturing process.

• "For Intel to make an outsized bid here, their ​18A yield improvement has to be ... ‌better than market expectations," said ​Ryuta Makino, analyst at Intel investor Gabelli Funds.

(Reporting by Zaheer Kachwala in Bengaluru; Editing by Anil D'Silva)

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