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Intel Stock News Today (Dec. 20, 2025): Nvidia’s $5B Deal Clears, Intel Foundry Hits a Key 14A Milestone, and What Wall Street Forecasts for INTC
20 December 2025
6 mins read

Intel Stock News Today (Dec. 20, 2025): Nvidia’s $5B Deal Clears, Intel Foundry Hits a Key 14A Milestone, and What Wall Street Forecasts for INTC

December 20, 2025 — Intel Corporation (NASDAQ: INTC) heads into the final stretch of 2025 with two narratives colliding: a high-profile partnership boost that removes a major regulatory overhang, and a “show-me” execution story that still hinges on foundry credibility, geopolitics, and earnings follow-through.

As of the latest available quote early Saturday (UTC), Intel shares traded around $36.82, with heavy volume indicated versus typical sessions (noting that U.S. equity markets are closed on weekends and quotes can reflect delayed or off-session data).

Below is what matters for Intel stock on 20.12.2025—the biggest headlines moving sentiment, the most-cited forecasts and price targets, and the catalysts investors are watching next.


The headline catalyst: U.S. antitrust agencies clear Nvidia’s investment in Intel

One of the most market-relevant Intel developments this week: U.S. antitrust agencies have cleared NVIDIA’s investment in Intel, according to a notice posted by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC), removing a key regulatory uncertainty around the deal.

This matters for INTC for two reasons:

  1. Capital and credibility. Intel has been fighting to convince investors that its turnaround is more than cost cutting—that it’s a product and manufacturing recovery story. A strategic counterparty like Nvidia carries reputational weight.
  2. Competitive signaling. Reuters noted the deal “could pose risks” for rival manufacturers such as TSMC and AMD, underscoring that the partnership is being read as more than just a financial transaction. Reuters

What Nvidia and Intel said the partnership is designed to do

When Nvidia announced the transaction and broader collaboration, it described a multi-generational effort spanning custom data-center and personal computing products, including a plan to build x86 RTX SoCs that integrate NVIDIA RTX GPU chiplets with Intel CPU technology, plus joint work on AI infrastructure that brings Nvidia’s AI stack to Intel x86 platforms.

Even before the FTC clearance, Intel also highlighted this Nvidia relationship as part of a broader balance-sheet and ecosystem strengthening push—placing the collaboration alongside SoftBank’s investment and U.S. government funding in its recent quarterly communications.

Why it’s bullish: it reinforces a “partners want Intel to succeed” narrative, especially in AI-era compute where ecosystem alignment can matter as much as raw silicon performance.

Why it’s not a free win: investors will still want proof that the partnership translates into revenue, margins, and competitive products—not just headlines.


Intel Foundry momentum: a High‑NA EUV milestone that feeds the 14A story

Intel’s foundry ambitions are only as credible as its process roadmap. In that context, a key technical milestone landed this week: Intel completed installation/validation steps around ASML’s High‑NA EUV platform tied to Intel’s next-generation nodes.

Coverage this week points to Intel installing and preparing ASML’s TWINSCAN EXE:5200B—described as the first commercial High‑NA EUV lithography tool—setting the stage for Intel’s 14A process node development. Reports cite throughput around 175 wafers per hour and 0.7nm overlay accuracy, metrics that matter directly for yield, defect control, and cycle time at advanced nodes.

The investor takeaway: it’s about reducing complexity and improving manufacturability

This isn’t just “cool tech.” It’s about compressing manufacturing steps and stabilizing output. Earlier in 2025, Reuters reported Intel engineers highlighting that High‑NA can reduce multi-exposure complexity—describing early results where steps that previously required multiple exposures and many processing steps could be done with dramatically fewer steps. Reuters

That theme—less complexity, better throughput, better yields—is what the market cares about, because it connects directly to:

  • whether Intel can produce leading-edge wafers profitably, and
  • whether external customers will trust Intel Foundry with premium designs.

The “risk headline” side: China-linked tool scrutiny and EU antitrust fines

Intel stock is also navigating a risk-heavy news cycle that can affect sentiment even when it doesn’t change near-term revenue.

1) Lawmakers criticize Intel testing China-linked equipment for advanced manufacturing

Reuters reported that Intel tested wet etch tools from ACM Research for potential use in Intel’s most advanced process, 14A, and that the situation drew criticism from Republican lawmakers who raised U.S. national security concerns.

Intel said the ACM tools “are not used in our semiconductor production process” and that it complies with U.S. laws and regulations. Reuters

Why investors care: even absent any violation, this kind of story introduces uncertainty—about policy risk, supply-chain constraints, and potential restrictions tied to subsidies.

2) EU court reduces, but does not erase, Intel’s antitrust penalty

On the regulatory front in Europe, Reuters reported Intel lost its challenge against an EU antitrust fine originally set at €376 million, though the court reduced the penalty by about a third.

Financially, it’s not a thesis-breaker for a company of Intel’s scale. But it contributes to a broader picture: Intel’s turnaround is playing out under intense regulatory, geopolitical, and political scrutiny.


Financial backdrop: Q3 beat, Q4 guidance, and why the “demand > supply” line matters

To understand Intel stock in late 2025, you have to anchor on what Intel last told markets—and what it promised next.

In its Q3 2025 release, Intel reported:

  • Revenue: $13.7B (up 3% YoY)
  • Non‑GAAP EPS: $0.23
  • Cash from operations: $2.5B

For Q4 2025, Intel guided to:

  • Revenue: $12.8B–$13.8B
  • Non‑GAAP gross margin: ~36.5%
  • Non‑GAAP EPS: $0.08

A notable nuance: Intel’s Q4 guidance excludes Altera following the sale of a majority ownership interest completed in Q3 2025.

Why the market is still focused on the cash story

Intel’s leadership framed the quarter as improving execution plus balance-sheet reinforcement, pointing to:

  • accelerated funding from the U.S. Government,
  • Nvidia’s investment, and
  • SoftBank’s investment, as factors increasing flexibility.

Intel’s CFO also used a line that investors tend to latch onto: “Current demand is outpacing supply”, and Intel expects that trend to persist into 2026. Intel Corporation

That single sentence helps explain why Intel stock can rally even while skeptics argue margins and market share must still be proven: it implies a stronger near-term pricing and utilization backdrop—if Intel can execute.


Wall Street forecasts for Intel stock: where price targets sit heading into 2026

Analyst outlooks on INTC remain mixed—less “universal buy,” more “range of outcomes.” But there’s a consistent pattern across major estimate aggregators: the center of gravity is in the mid-to-high $30s, with a wide dispersion between bulls and bears.

Here are several widely cited target snapshots:

  • One Nasdaq-referenced dataset (as of early December 2025) put Intel’s average one-year price target around $36.63, with forecasts spanning roughly $18 to $54.
  • MarketWatch-listed analyst estimates showed an average target price around $38.48 (with dozens of ratings).
  • MarketBeat’s forecast page showed an average target around $34.84 (with a high target in the low $50s and a low target around $20).

Bull case vs. bear case, as reflected in recent commentary

Bullish framing tends to emphasize:

  • the Nvidia partnership and what it signals for Intel’s relevance in the AI stack,
  • improving execution and guidance cadence,
  • and foundry roadmap milestones such as High‑NA EUV progress for 14A.

Bearish framing tends to emphasize:

  • the possibility that Intel’s rally has already priced in a “clean” turnaround, and execution risk remains high. One Forbes commentary piece argued for a significantly lower target (mid‑$20s). Forbes
  • ongoing policy/geopolitical headline risk (including the China-linked tool testing story).

What the “consensus = Hold” really means for investors

Across aggregators, Intel often shows up as a Hold/Neutral consensus rather than a strong Buy—consistent with a stock where:

  • upside exists if execution continues (process milestones, product competitiveness, foundry customer traction),
  • but downside exists if margins, delays, or external shocks hit before the story converts into durable earnings power.

MarketBeat’s roundup of analyst stances included a mix heavy on Holds, with a smaller number of Buys and a meaningful number of Sells.


What to watch next: near-term catalysts that can move Intel stock

Intel is entering a catalyst-dense window where investors will be recalibrating expectations for 2026.

1) Next earnings date window

Multiple market calendars list Intel’s next earnings report timing as late January 2026 (commonly cited around January 29, 2026, though these dates can be estimates until confirmed).

2) CES 2026 and Intel’s early-2026 messaging

Intel lists CES (Jan 5–9, 2026) as a major upcoming event, which often becomes a platform for client CPU narrative, AI PC positioning, and ecosystem announcements.

3) Intel Foundry Direct Connect (March 2026)

Intel also lists Intel Foundry Direct Connect (March 24, 2026), a relevant milestone for anyone tracking external foundry customer momentum and node-roadmap confidence.

4) Policy and government relations—now a core part of the Intel story

Intel’s political exposure is unusually high for a chip company, in part because of government-linked funding and ownership structures that have been discussed publicly in 2025.
Intel also recently made notable government-affairs leadership appointments, according to Reuters.


The big picture for INTC in late 2025: why the market still sees a “wide outcomes” stock

If you’re trying to understand Intel stock on December 20, 2025, it helps to frame it as a tug-of-war between:

Reasons investors are leaning in

  • FTC clearance removes a major overhang on Nvidia’s investment.
  • Intel is stacking credibility signals (strategic partners, funding, and manufacturing milestones).
  • Q3 execution and guidance helped rebuild confidence in near-term operations.

Reasons skeptics remain loud

  • Foundry success is not guaranteed; it requires flawless execution and customer wins.
  • Geopolitical/policy risk is not theoretical—headlines are arriving in real time.
  • Regulatory and governance narratives can weigh on valuation even when fundamentals are improving.

Bottom line: Intel stock is trading like a comeback story—but the proof phase is still ahead

Intel (INTC) is closing 2025 with momentum: a cleared Nvidia deal, tangible foundry process milestones, and a quarterly update that emphasized improved execution and demand strength.

But it is also a stock priced for scrutiny. The market is demanding continued delivery—on margins, roadmap timing, and evidence that Intel Foundry can earn durable external revenue in a world where TSMC remains the benchmark and AMD remains a relentless competitor.

For investors, the cleanest way to track Intel from here is simple:

  • watch earnings and guidance in late January,
  • watch the foundry narrative into spring 2026,
  • and watch policy headlines that can swing sentiment quickly.

Stock Market Today

  • Q1 Earnings Review: American Airlines Outperforms Consumer Discretionary Travel Stocks
    May 23, 2026, 4:14 PM EDT. American Airlines (NASDAQ:AAL) posted a strong Q1 with revenue of $13.91 billion, up 10.8% year-on-year, beating analyst estimates by 0.6%. The airline's stock rallied 17.6% post-earnings, trading at $13.53. CEO Robert Isom noted record revenue and optimistic guidance for Q2. The broader consumer discretionary travel sector, comprising 19 stocks, delivered mixed results with revenues beating consensus by 1.6% but next quarter's guidance dropping 9.2%. These companies face challenges like macroeconomic sensitivity, price competition due to low switching costs, and external shocks such as fuel price volatility and geopolitical instability. On average, travel and vacation stocks gained 3.9% since reporting. American Airlines' robust earnings highlight its resilience amid sector headwinds.

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