Intel shares are edging higher in early U.S. trading after Elon Musk said it’s “worth having discussions” with Intel about manufacturing Tesla’s next‑gen AI chips, a remark that instantly pushed the chipmaker back into the AI spotlight. Intel’s stock ticked up in pre‑market trade on Friday as traders weighed the significance of a potential Tesla–Intel tie‑up alongside this fall’s landmark Nvidia partnership and the U.S. government’s 10% equity stake in Intel. [1]
Today’s Intel headlines (Nov. 7, 2025)
1) Musk floats Intel as a possible Tesla chip partner.
At Tesla’s annual meeting, Musk said building a “gigantic chip fab” is likely and that “maybe we’ll do something with Intel,” noting the EV maker’s AI5 processor roadmap and massive chip needs for autonomy and robotics. Intel shares jumped on the remarks, with after‑hours and pre‑market gains spilling into Friday. Intel declined to comment. [2]
2) INTC pre‑market turns higher on Musk chatter.
By early Friday, financial outlets tracked a modest pre‑market rise in Intel as traders priced the odds of any Tesla–Intel manufacturing collaboration. [3]
3) Competitive backdrop intensifies.
Rival AMD flagged risks from the Intel–Nvidia pact announced in September—under which Nvidia invested $5B in Intel and the companies agreed to co‑develop PC and data‑center products—signaling potential pressure on AMD if the alliance gains traction. [4]
4) Talent moves: CRN says a data‑center AI exec is leaving Intel for AMD.
CRN reported that Saurabh Kulkarni, a vice president overseeing Data Center AI product management (including work on Gaudi accelerators), is exiting; AMD declined to comment. [5]
Why Musk’s comment matters for Intel
- A new external customer for advanced process tech. Intel has repeatedly signaled it needs major outside customers to underpin its next‑gen manufacturing nodes. Musk’s suggestion of talks—while not a deal—puts Intel in the conversation for high‑volume AI silicon beyond its own product lines. [6]
- Leverage with Nvidia partnership. In September, Nvidia agreed to buy $5B of Intel stock and co‑develop multiple generations of PC and data‑center products. Nvidia said the collaboration doesn’t initially put its GPUs on Intel’s foundry lines, but Intel will supply CPUs and advanced packaging for joint systems—experience that could translate to future high‑mix AI manufacturing. [7]
- Public sector backstop. In August, the U.S. government took roughly a 10% equity stake in Intel via a package that converted grants and other funding into equity—an extraordinary policy step aimed at shoring up domestic chipmaking. The move gives Intel financial runway while it courts marquee external customers. [8]
What changed for Intel this week (context for today’s move)
- Tesla’s shareholder vote & chip roadmap raised the stakes. Shareholders approved Musk’s record pay plan on Thursday; he simultaneously outlined Tesla’s rising chip needs for autonomy and robotics and floated Intel as a potential manufacturing partner. That immediate adjacency pulled INTC into Friday’s pre‑market gainers. [9]
- Edge AI push, two days ago: Intel highlighted an edge AI systems approach with Cisco, anchored on Xeon 6 SoCs for real‑time inferencing—another signal of Intel’s “inference‑first” focus while it works to re‑establish a position in data‑center AI GPUs next year. [10]
The bigger picture: Intel’s 2025 reset
- Nvidia partnership (Sept. 18): Nvidia’s $5B stake made it one of Intel’s largest shareholders and established a co‑development path for PC and data‑center products. Intel’s foundry will provide CPUs and advanced packaging for some joint systems; Nvidia continues to evaluate Intel’s process technology. [11]
- Government stake (Aug. 22): The U.S. government took ~10% of Intel, converting federal support into equity to stabilize the turnaround and accelerate U.S. manufacturing. [12]
- Earnings & guidance: Intel’s late‑October results topped expectations and lifted shares as investors digested cost cuts and outside capital, though profitability and 18A yield ramps remain key work‑in‑progress items. [13]
What to watch next
- Substance behind Tesla–Intel “discussions.” Look for any confirmation of foundry, packaging, or custom silicon engagements linked to Tesla’s AI5/AI6 roadmap—and potential timeline overlap with Intel’s 18A ecosystem. (Musk framed fab needs as 100k+ wafer starts/month; that scale would be transformative for any supplier.) [14]
- Intel–Nvidia execution milestones. Details on first co‑developed products (PC and data center) and how packaging/CPU integration lands with cloud customers. [15]
- Talent churn vs. hiring. Watch whether further AI leadership exits are offset by external recruits as Intel reorganizes data‑center and AI teams. [16]
- M&A chatter: Reports last week said Intel was in early talks to acquire AI chip startup SambaNova; even exploratory discussions would underscore Intel’s urgency around AI accelerators. [17]
Quick take for investors (not investment advice)
- Catalyst today: Musk’s off‑the‑cuff nod to Intel keeps the “external customer” narrative alive—a prerequisite for Intel’s manufacturing reset. [18]
- Medium‑term lens: The Nvidia alliance and U.S. equity backstop reduce near‑term funding risk and could accelerate learning cycles across packaging/CPU integration. Execution and yields on 18A, plus credible hyperscale wins, remain the swing variables. [19]
Sources & further reading
- Musk on potential Intel partnership and “gigantic chip fab”; stock pop on comments. [20]
- Pre‑market price action for INTC (before‑hours quotes). [21]
- Intel shares rose after Musk’s remarks (after‑hours context). [22]
- Nvidia invests $5B in Intel; scope of the collaboration. [23]
- U.S. government takes ~10% Intel stake (policy context). [24]
- AMD flags risks from Intel–Nvidia tie‑up; industry reactions. [25]
- Reported Intel AI talent departure to AMD. [26]
- Intel–Cisco: systems approach for AI at the edge (Nov. 5). [27]
References
1. www.reuters.com, 2. www.reuters.com, 3. www.marketwatch.com, 4. www.reuters.com, 5. www.crn.com, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. www.reuters.com, 8. www.reuters.com, 9. www.reuters.com, 10. newsroom.intel.com, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. www.reuters.com, 13. www.reuters.com, 14. www.reuters.com, 15. www.reuters.com, 16. www.crn.com, 17. www.reuters.com, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. www.reuters.com, 20. www.reuters.com, 21. www.marketwatch.com, 22. www.investing.com, 23. www.reuters.com, 24. www.reuters.com, 25. www.trendforce.com, 26. www.crn.com, 27. newsroom.intel.com


