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Intel plans to slash its capital expenditures and eliminate managers as the US chipmaker plots a turnaround under its new chief executive and contends with President Donald Trump’s trade war with China.
The company, which cut 15,000 jobs in the second half 2024, said on Thursday its plan included “streamlining the organisation, eliminating management layers and enabling faster decision-making”.
But Intel gave a more downbeat guide on the current quarter — sending its shares lower in after-hours trading — as the Trump administration’s sweeping tariff plans send shockwaves through the semiconductor industry.
The California-based chipmaker and designer said it expected adjusted revenue of $11.2bn to $12.4bn for the three months to the end of June, lower than analyst expectations of $12.9bn, according to Bloomberg estimates.
The shares were down more than 5 per cent in after-hours trading following the release.
Intel’s earnings report was the first since Lip-Bu Tan took over as chief executive in March, after the board ousted Pat Gelsinger in December.
The latest cuts follow months of financial woes for the chipmaker, which has fallen behind Taiwan’s TSMC in the race to manufacture leading-edge semiconductors and struggled to open a business building chips for competitors — a process started under Gelsinger.
Competitors have also threatened its position in the PC chip space while it has failed to capture a meaningful share of the AI data centre chip market, where Nvidia has dominated.
Investors have broadly welcomed Tan’s appointment as a sign of a new strategic direction for the company. Last month he promised “cultural change” at Intel. He has held off on discussing any potential sale of the company’s lossmaking manufacturing business, which some investors have called for.
In an email to Intel employees on Thursday, the new CEO said “unnecessary bureaucracy” was slowing down critical engineering efforts. “There is no way around the fact that these critical changes will reduce the size of our workforce,” he wrote.
He said the cuts would begin during the current quarter and move “as quickly as possible” over the coming months.
Tan also said the company would be enforcing a return-to-work policy, requiring four days per week on site by September 1.
Intel said it was not including restructuring charges in its guidance.
For 2025, Intel said it was revising down its previous operational expenses targets from $17.5bn to $17bn, and cutting $2bn from its earlier capital expenditure target of $20bn.
For the first three months of 2025, Intel reported adjusted revenue of $12.7bn, flat from a year ago but above Wall Street’s consensus estimates of $12.3bn. Its net loss widened to $821mn from a loss of $381mn a year ago but was better than analysts expected.
Trump has spared semiconductors and related products from the brunt of his tariff regime on China. But they are subject to a national security review that could lead to further tariffs and more disruption to the highly complex, global semiconductor supply chain.
Washington has already cracked down on exports of artificial intelligence chips to China by US companies, including Nvidia and Intel, as it seeks to exert pressure on Beijing and protect American technology.
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