SANTA CLARA, Calif., March 4, 2026, 04:46 (PST)
- Intel announced that board chair Frank Yeary is set to retire following the annual meeting, with director Craig Barratt taking over the position.
- According to a securities filing, Yeary won’t seek another term, dropping the board’s size to 11 directors.
- CEO Lip-Bu Tan is steering a turnaround, betting on manufacturing and a push into the contract-chip business as the company shifts strategy.
Intel disclosed in a securities filing that board chair Frank Yeary plans to retire following the company’s annual meeting, with director Craig Barratt set to take over as chair. According to the filing, Yeary won’t seek re-election, trimming the board’s size to 11 from 12 members.
Intel’s chair shuffle comes as chief executive Lip-Bu Tan pushes to steer the company out of a stretch marked by costly stumbles and patchy performance. An industry-seasoned board leader gives Tan more leverage to pitch his drawn-out, high-priced strategy to backers.
Intel is once again betting heavily on its manufacturing plants as it pushes to expand its “foundry” business—producing chips on behalf of outside clients as well as for itself. The approach demands strict discipline: cash gets tied up for a long stretch, and only later, if customers materialize, does that investment start to pay back in recurring revenue.
Tan expressed gratitude to Yeary for his “commitment to Intel,” as the company announced Barratt is set to move into the independent chair role after the May 13 annual meeting. “Reinventing Intel is a disciplined, multi-year effort,” Yeary said, highlighting momentum on Intel 18A and 14A—those are Intel’s next-gen chipmaking processes. Barratt cited “significant steps to strengthen its financial position,” and Intel noted it has brought on four new independent directors since 2024. Intel Corporation
Jay Goldberg at Seaport Securities didn’t mince words, calling Yeary’s exit “long overdue” and faulting Intel for “a lot of bad decisions” during his board tenure. He sees Barratt’s move up as a positive step, saying, “Lip-Bu’s biggest challenge is changing Intel’s culture and professionalizing the board will help that a lot.” Intel, once the leading U.S. chipmaker, lost ground after missing the smartphone surge and slipping behind Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co in manufacturing, Reuters noted. Reuters
Board chairs aren’t chip designers; their influence is all about pressing management on deadlines and budgets. Intel, for its part, is working to shed its reputation as a sprawling conglomerate, aiming instead for a streamlined, engineering-focused operation.
Intel’s manufacturing push is a direct challenge to leading contract chipmakers like TSMC—an effort to attract outside business. On the product side, the company remains in a tight contest with AMD for PCs and servers. Nvidia, for its part, continues to dominate when it comes to AI data-center chips.
When it comes to Intel’s foundry push, the execution is what really counts, not just the catchphrases. “Yield”—that’s the percentage of usable chips a production line actually delivers—has the power to sway margins well ahead of any process gaining wider traction.
Still, just swapping out board members won’t address lagging process tech or sluggish demand. Should Intel slip on its manufacturing goals or struggle to attract major foundry clients, all that spending could end up weighing the company down instead of helping.
Yeary stays on as chair up to the handover following the annual meeting. Barratt steps in with a mandate that looks straightforward: maintain Intel’s turnaround and keep the board sharply focused.
Investors are zeroed in on whether a new chair will actually mean tougher calls on capital, hiring, and product focus. Intel’s real story isn’t happening in board meetings—it’s still unfolding in its fabs and chip rollouts.