New York, March 20, 2026, 10:21 EDT
Intel slipped 1% early Friday, trimming some of Thursday’s rally, as chip stocks came under pressure alongside a weaker market. By 10:06 a.m. EDT, shares traded at $45.71, down 1.0%. Nvidia slid 1.3%, AMD dropped 1.5%, Broadcom lost 0.9%. Qualcomm bucked the trend, up 0.8%. The Nasdaq started the day off 0.46% as investors adjusted rate-cut expectations amid Middle East unrest. Reuters
This matters for Intel, still seen as a turnaround play under Chief Executive Lip-Bu Tan. Every product revamp or board shuffle gets dissected by investors looking for real evidence the recovery is working. Tan’s trimmed the workforce, slimmed down management layers, and steered Intel back toward manufacturing rigor—plus, he’s chasing new outside clients for its next-gen process tech. But the market’s still waiting to see if all that translates to more consistent growth and margins. Reuters
There was actual news from Intel. Versa on Thursday announced it’s deepening its partnership with Intel, allowing companies to deploy AI-powered networking, security, and analytics on Xeon 6 chips directly at the edge—so data processing happens closer to where information originates, not back in some distant data center. Cristina Rodriguez, an Intel executive, said this approach is designed to deliver a “high-throughput, low-latency foundation” for edge inference, meaning real-time use of trained AI models. Business Wire
18A, Intel’s upcoming manufacturing node, remains another area under scrutiny. This month, Chief Financial Officer David Zinsner pointed to enough headway for 18A to qualify as “a good node”—one Intel can market to outside clients, not just for its own use. Still, as Reuters has noted, only a limited portion of chips produced with the process have so far met customer-grade standards. Reuters
That point sits at the heart of the bullish thesis. Back in January, Gabelli Funds analyst Ryuta Makino called the near-term setup “set up very well,” suggesting Intel might pull off double-digit price hikes for server CPUs in 2026 if data-center demand ramps up. Reuters
Still, Intel’s supply issues haven’t gone away. Back in January, the company admitted to investors that it couldn’t keep up with server chip demand, especially for processors paired with Nvidia’s AI hardware. Michael Schulman, chief investment officer at Running Point Capital, said the core issue is “supply-constrained rather than demand-constrained”—a disconnect that can push any profit rebound further out. Reuters
Sentiment snapped back fast on Thursday. Intel shares climbed 2.55% to $46.18, notching a second consecutive win and outperforming the broader decline. Still, trading was thin—just 73.6 million shares changed hands, well under the 50-day average. Even with the back-to-back uptick, Intel remains 15.4% below its January 22 peak of $54.60. MarketWatch
The shares could stay under strain if the broader selloff drags on, even with fresh customer deals for Intel. On Friday, a Reuters analysis pointed out the S&P 500 sits more than 5% off its peak. Strategists note the outcome—whether this remains a standard pullback or worsens—hinges on how prolonged the energy shock from the Iran conflict turns out to be. Reuters