New York, Feb 15, 2026, 11:10 EST — The session has ended.
- Intel finished Friday’s session 0.7% higher, settling at $46.79.
- D.A. Davidson started coverage, assigning a Neutral rating and putting the target at $45.
- Traders are back Tuesday after the U.S. Presidents Day break. Fed minutes are coming up, and chip-sector demand signals are also on the radar.
Intel (INTC) closed out Friday at $46.79, edging up 0.7%. The slight lift kept the stock hovering close to its level at the start of the month, with investors weighing new analyst notes against lingering regulatory concerns.
The shift comes just before a holiday break that will close U.S. markets Monday. Investors get a breather—trading picks up again Tuesday. (New York Stock Exchange)
Wall Street couldn’t shake the nerves ahead of the break. The S&P 500 managed a slight rise Friday, but the Nasdaq slipped. “Any whiff of optimism continues to get rejected,” said Michael James, managing director at Rosenblatt Securities. (Reuters)
Semi equipment names caught a bid after Applied Materials guided higher for the next quarter, citing demand tied to AI—a signal investors typically watch for clues about the sector’s broader spending trends. (Reuters)
D.A. Davidson has started coverage on Intel, assigning the chipmaker a Neutral rating and setting a price target of $45—roughly 4% under where shares finished on Friday. (Nasdaq)
Still, D.A. Davidson’s Gil Luria isn’t convinced. He described Intel as a “show me” story, pointing out the surge in shares has jumped ahead of any real evidence that the recovery is sustainable. If Intel stumbles on execution, or if demand looks shaky, the stock could be in for a rough patch. (Finviz)
Regulatory noise won’t fade. The Competition Commission of India slapped Intel with a 27.38 crore rupee penalty — roughly $3 million — tied to its warranty terms for boxed microprocessors. The policy, according to the order, locked warranty coverage within India to chips supplied by local authorized distributors. (Tom’s Hardware)
Intel shares moved up Friday, but competitors didn’t follow the same path — Nvidia dropped 2.2%, AMD edged up 0.7%, and the iShares Semiconductor ETF added 0.9%.
The sting from Intel’s late-January report hasn’t faded. Back then, the company warned of a weaker-than-expected first quarter, citing softer sales and profit plus trouble keeping up with demand for its server chips powering AI data centers. (Reuters)
Traders now turn to the Federal Reserve’s policy minutes, the full rundown from January’s meeting, set for release Feb. 18 at 2:00 p.m. ET. These minutes could shift rate bets, which matter for tech stocks. Intel is expected to report earnings April 23, based on market calendars. (Federal Reserve)