Business | Silicon sally

Can dealmaking save Intel?

America’s failing chip champion needs a financial-engineering miracle

Photograph: Anastasiia Sapon/New York Times/Redux/Eyevine

Intel has spent two decades missing the next big thing. The chipmaker’s dominant PC business blinded it to the opportunity from mobile phones in the 2000s. More recently, the firm was slow to adopt extreme-ultraviolet lithography, an expensive chipmaking process that was originally funded by Intel itself. Now Nvidia dominates the white-hot market for designing artificial-intelligence (AI) chips, becoming the world’s most valuable semiconductor company. Investors in Intel have voted with their feet (see chart).

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This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Can dealmaking save Intel?”

From the September 28th 2024 edition

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