New York, Feb 4, 2026, 10:45 ET — In regular session
- Intel shares fell 1.6%, sliding with other chip stocks amid investor reactions to the renewed GPU push
- Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan confirmed they’re moving ahead with data-center GPU development and have named a lead architect to spearhead the effort
- Investors are focusing on execution risks, raising concerns over software lock-in and the company’s ability to attract customers
Intel (INTC.O) shares fell 1.6% to $48.46 on Wednesday, pulling back from their close on Tuesday. The slide reflected investor caution over Intel’s push into graphics chips, set against a shaky backdrop for tech stocks.
The drop comes after CEO Lip-Bu Tan revealed Intel’s plan to build graphics processing units (GPUs), essential for speeding up AI workloads. The company also hired Eric Demmers, a Qualcomm veteran, to lead its GPU architecture team. (Reuters)
Why it matters now: Intel is scrambling to reclaim its position in AI data centers while trying to rebuild confidence in its manufacturing. That places it in direct competition with Nvidia, and to some degree AMD. Investors have shown bursts of optimism about the comeback story but quickly pull back at any sign of trouble. (Reuters)
Intel’s shares climbed to a high of $49.85 before sliding down to $48.35 in regular trading. By late morning in New York, roughly 27.6 million shares had traded hands.
On the sidelines of the Cisco AI Summit, Tan noted that Intel’s GPU efforts are closely linked to the data center and highlighted ongoing work with customers to refine their needs. He also revealed “a couple of customers” currently partnering with Intel Foundry, the company’s contract-manufacturing division. (Reuters)
Chipmakers showed varied moves, as Advanced Micro Devices’ forecast rattled parts of the AI sector. Still, certain hardware suppliers attracted buyers, boosted by solid demand signals. (Reuters)
Intel’s short-term outlook still hinges on its January guidance. The chipmaker projected first-quarter revenue from $11.7 billion to $12.7 billion and warned of a GAAP loss per share, underscoring just how little room there is for error. (Intel Corporation)
Analysts following Intel’s GPU push agree hardware is just one hurdle. “The decisive bottleneck is software,” said Manish Rawat, semiconductor analyst at TechInsights, pointing to Nvidia’s entrenched CUDA ecosystem. Forrester’s Charlie Dai cautioned that buyers won’t take the plunge without “seamless compatibility.” Omdia’s chief analyst Lian Jye Su emphasized Intel needs to roll out developer-approved tools and software. (Network World)
This week’s filings featured routine insider-trading disclosures, including multiple Form 4 reports and a Form 144 notice outlining an intended sale. (Intel Corporation)
The risk is straightforward: Intel could invest heavily but fail to capture meaningful GPU market share if developers and customers remain loyal to existing platforms, or if foundry delays set the company back while rivals surge forward.
Investors are bracing for Nvidia’s quarterly earnings on Feb. 25. The report could shift sentiment not only in AI and GPU markets but also affect competitors such as Intel. (Nvidia)