Today: 22 May 2026
Intel stock dives 17% as AI chip supply bites; Nvidia, AMD and Microsoft face a big week
23 January 2026
2 mins read

Intel stock dives 17% as AI chip supply bites; Nvidia, AMD and Microsoft face a big week

New York, January 23, 2026, 17:09 EST — After-hours

  • Intel dropped in late trading after flagging that it might fall short on AI data-center server chip supply.
  • Nvidia and AMD climbed, but Microsoft outpaced them, making the AI trade look mixed heading into the weekend.
  • Investors are turning to the Fed and a packed schedule of megacap earnings to see if AI investments are really delivering results.

Intel shares dropped roughly 17% in after-hours trading Friday, deepening the steep selloff sparked by a gloomy forecast linked to AI data-center demand. Nvidia pushed up 1.5%, AMD added 2.3%, and Microsoft ticked higher by 3.3% in late trading.

AI-linked stocks have been all over the place just ahead of a heavy U.S. earnings calendar, where investors will zero in on whether big tech’s AI spending is actually boosting sales and profits. “It’s been a little bit of a short but steep roller-coaster ride,” said PNC’s Yung-Yu Ma. Franklin Templeton’s Chris Galipeau added that with valuations so high, “the earnings bar had better be met.” Reuters

Rates factor into the picture as well. Economists surveyed by Reuters anticipate the Federal Reserve will keep its benchmark rate steady at 3.50%–3.75% during the Jan. 27-28 meeting. Many now expect the Fed to maintain this pause through the quarter. Jeremy Schwartz of Nomura noted the surface-level outlook suggests the Fed “should remain on hold.” Reuters

Intel revealed on Thursday it’s having trouble keeping up with demand for its server CPUs, key components in AI data centers. The company projected first-quarter revenue between $11.7 billion and $12.7 billion, missing analysts’ average target of $12.51 billion. CEO Lip-Bu Tan admitted to analysts, “In the short term, I’m disappointed” the firm can’t fully meet demand. CFO David Zinsner added that cloud customers “were all a little bit caught off guard.” Intel’s server CPUs are frequently paired with Nvidia’s GPUs, which handle much of the AI model processing. Reuters

Just two days ago, investors were buying into the turnaround story. Gabelli Funds analyst Ryuta Makino highlighted the “big Intel bull case” — a “double-digit server CPU … price hike in 2026.” UBS, meanwhile, pointed to a downside: rising memory costs could dent PC demand, since memory accounts for 25% to 30% of a PC’s bill of materials, the bank noted. Reuters

The broader market painted a mixed picture. The Dow slipped 0.58% on Friday, the S&P 500 ended flat, and the Nasdaq gained 0.27%, despite Intel’s sharp fall dragging sentiment down. “We’re feeling pretty good, but mindful” of potential bumps ahead, said Jason Blackwell of Focus Partners Wealth. Nvidia climbed after Bloomberg reported that Chinese officials told companies like Alibaba, Tencent, and ByteDance to get ready for orders of Nvidia’s H200 AI chips, according to Reuters. Reuters

Amazon threw another curveball late last week. Reuters revealed the company plans a second wave of corporate layoffs next week, targeting roughly 30,000 positions. CEO Andy Jassy dismissed financial or AI reasons, describing the cuts as a “culture” move tied to excess management layers. Reuters

Washington is back in the spotlight on chip stocks. A U.S. House panel pushed forward a bill that would grant Congress more control over licenses for exporting advanced AI chips. The latest draft also includes a ban on Nvidia’s top-tier Blackwell chips. Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei slammed the move, calling it “a big mistake” to export those chips and likening it to “selling nuclear weapons to North Korea.” Reuters

The AI trade remains priced on the assumption of smooth execution. Should megacap earnings reveal hefty spending without clearer returns — or if the Fed adopts a tougher stance — those same high-multiple stocks that supported the indexes this week could drop sharply.

The Fed’s rate decision lands Wednesday, Jan. 28. After that, get ready for a packed slate of earnings from megacaps driving AI investments and cloud demand. Their reports will shape the mood for Monday’s reopening and the week ahead.

Stock Market Today

  • UK Stock Market Update: Games Workshop Profit Rise, Genuit Faces Challenges, Arkle Resources Boosts Drilling in Namibia
    May 22, 2026, 5:43 AM EDT. The UK stock market opens with key updates: Games Workshop reports a slight profit increase with revenues rising to at least £625 million. Genuit Group faces headwinds from Middle East conflicts and economic pressures, predicting flat half-year profits while implementing cost-saving measures. Arkle Resources, a uranium explorer, shares encouraging drilling results in Namibia, accelerating project plans and promising substantial news for shareholders. Market moves come amid mixed economic data and softer UK inflation, supporting slight gains in UK equities and the AIM All Share index.

Latest articles

Plug Power Shares Jump; Traders Eye AI Power Angle

Plug Power Shares Jump; Traders Eye AI Power Angle

22 May 2026
Plug Power shares rose 14.2% to $3.78 on Thursday, lifted by sector momentum after Bloom Energy announced a major AI data-center power deal. Plug separately confirmed its Barrow Green Hydrogen project in Britain reached final investment decision and will supply Kimberly-Clark. Plug posted a first-quarter net loss of $245.3 million, wider than last year, and ended March with $802 million in cash.
IonQ Shares Pop In Quantum Move; U.S. Funds Go To Rival

IonQ Shares Pop In Quantum Move; U.S. Funds Go To Rival

22 May 2026
IonQ shares closed at $58.89 Thursday, up 12.24%, as quantum-computing stocks surged after the U.S. Commerce Department announced $2.013 billion in incentives for the sector. IonQ was not among the direct recipients, with IBM and GlobalFoundries named for the largest awards. IonQ reported Q1 revenue of $64.7 million, up 755% year-over-year, and raised its full-year outlook. SkyWater shareholders approved a merger with IonQ on May 8.
Connecticut Car-Accident Claims Are Getting Harder to Settle as Costs, Evidence Fights Mount

Connecticut Car-Accident Claims Are Getting Harder to Settle as Costs, Evidence Fights Mount

22 May 2026
Mancini Law says Connecticut car-accident claims are growing more complex as medical treatment, recovery times, and insurance disputes lengthen settlements. State data show traffic deaths fell in 2025, but bicycle and pedestrian fatalities rose. Medical care and insurance costs are rising unevenly, fueling disputes over crash-related expenses. Lawyers warn early settlements may miss hidden injuries or future losses.
Dow Jones today: Intel’s warning knocks the Dow as traders line up Fed week and Big Tech earnings
Previous Story

Dow Jones today: Intel’s warning knocks the Dow as traders line up Fed week and Big Tech earnings

Oracle stock slips after Morgan Stanley warning; TikTok U.S. deal puts ORCL in play
Next Story

Oracle stock slips after Morgan Stanley warning; TikTok U.S. deal puts ORCL in play

Go toTop