New York, July 12, 2026, 12:10 (EDT)
Intel Corporation NASDAQ:INTC lost about $52.9 billion in market cap between the July 2 close and Friday based on its current share count. U.S. exchanges were shut Sunday; shares finished at $109.84, off 2.4% Friday and down 8.7% over those days—a drop far larger than the implied value of Intel’s Altera stake.
Altera CEO Raghib Hussain said Friday the company’s revenue rose over 20% last year and he’s looking for growth in the mid-20% range for this year. He said operating income is set to more than double as Altera moves toward a public listing. Intel kept a 49% stake after offloading 51% to Silver Lake for $4.46 billion, giving Altera a $8.75 billion valuation. Altera makes field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) that go up against Xilinx, now part of Advanced Micro Devices NASDAQ:AMD. The chips are made by Intel Foundry, Intel’s contract manufacturing arm, and by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co NYSE:TSM. “If GPU is the brain, the FPGAs are the nervous system,” Hussain said. Reuters
By this math, Intel’s stake is worth around $4.29 billion, which comes to $0.85 per Intel share and is less than 0.8% of Intel’s market cap as of Friday. Even if Altera eventually lists at twice the value, hitting $17.5 billion, Intel would pick up another $4.29 billion. That’s still less than a third of the value Intel’s stock lost in just one session. Altera brings in some value, but it won’t make up for stronger processor or foundry numbers.
| Public-figure calculation | Approximate value | Scale |
|---|---|---|
| Intel closed Friday worth $552.06 billion | $552.06 billion | Baseline |
| Intel’s 49% Altera stake under the deal | $4.29 billion | 0.8% of Intel |
| Altera stake works out to $0.85 per Intel share | $0.85 | — |
| Intel lost $13.58 billion in value Friday | $13.58 billion | 3.2 times the stake |
| Value lost from July 2 to July 10 totals $52.87 billion | $52.87 billion | 12.3 times the stake |
| If Altera’s valuation doubles, it adds $4.29 billion for Intel | $4.29 billion | Another $0.85 a share |
Figures do not include taxes, transaction costs, or any discounts on a non-controlling stake.
The gap suggests this was more about Intel than just weakness in chips. MarketWatch’s rolling five-day numbers had Intel lagging AMD by 11.2 points and behind the PHLX Semiconductor Index by 12.8 points. Still, Intel was up the most in the sector year-to-date after rallying earlier.
| Security or index | Friday | Five-day reading | 2026 year to date |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intel | fell 2.40% | lost 10.11% for the week | still up 197.67% so far in 2026 |
| AMD | up 2.04% Friday | added 1.06% in five days | rallied 160.50% since the start of the year |
| TSMC U.S. shares | dropped 0.65% | down 3.91% over the week | gained 42.85% this year |
| PHLX Semiconductor Index | added 0.06% | rose 2.70% across five days | up 83.07% for 2026 |
| Nasdaq Composite | edged up 0.29% | climbed 1.74% this week | has risen 13.08% since January |
Data as of July 10.
Stifel Financial NYSE:SF analyst Ruben Roy bumped up his price target on Intel to $120 from $75 on Friday, but kept his Hold rating. That new target is 9.2% higher than Intel’s close on Friday. Roy said AI-focused infrastructure firms are still held back more by supply than demand, with order backlogs and production pledges keeping growth in play. The big jump in Roy’s target comes with a Hold, so investors get more support on Intel’s current valuation, but no buy call.
Intel struggled, but the broader market didn’t follow. The S&P 500 closed up 0.42% on Friday. The Nasdaq rose 0.29%, and the chip index ticked 0.06% higher. Analysts are looking for about 24% earnings growth for S&P 500 companies in the second quarter. “A high-bar quarter with a narrow margin of error,” said Terry Sandven, chief equity strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Management, part of U.S. Bancorp NYSE:USB. Reuters
ASML Holding NASDAQ:ASML reports Wednesday and TSMC is set for Thursday, ahead of Intel’s July 23 release. Investors will also watch inflation data and retail sales for any impact on rate forecasts. “A lot of factors coming to a head all at once,” said Michael Reynolds, Glenmede’s vice president of investment strategy.
| Date | Event | Why Intel investors will watch |
|---|---|---|
| Tuesday, July 14 | June consumer price index | Inflation and rates outlook can shift how investors value chipmakers |
| Wednesday, July 15 | June producer prices; ASML second-quarter results | Signals on chip costs and buying in chipmaking tools |
| Thursday, July 16 | U.S. retail sales; TSMC second-quarter results | Looks at consumer and chip sector demand, and Intel’s top contract rival’s spending |
| Thursday, July 23 | Intel second-quarter results after the close | Quarterly chip sales, margins, and foundry progress |
Investors get ready for a busy week, with earnings, CPI, and Iran in focus, Reuters reports.
But the Altera math might look different. If the listing comes at a higher valuation, or Intel sells more of its stake, that would mean more cash coming in. The Reuters interview didn’t mention a timing or valuation, and taxes and a non-controlling stake discount could eat into Intel’s take. The bigger risk for Intel sits elsewhere: if server processor demand stays low, or foundry yields don’t pick up, or if margins disappoint on July 23, those issues could easily outweigh any small bump from Altera.
After Friday, the big question for investors is if Intel, with a market cap near $552 billion, can turn its processor business and huge manufacturing into lasting profits. Altera is a boost. But at the last deal price, it’s not enough to move the stock.