
It could be a good deal, it could be a bad one, says Jack Gold, president of J. Gold Associates, there’s too little information to tell.
“If it’s a loan like the feds did for other industries like aerospace and auto when they were down and out, that might be OK,” he said. “In essence the government got an IOU that they cashed out when the companies got back on their feet. If it’s just the administration owning a piece of Intel permanently, then it’s a very bad idea in my opinion.”
Intel could use the extra funding but not if the Feds control anything in the company, he added. But the devil is in the details, and we don’t know the details. “Until we have more clarification of this and what it means, everything is pure speculation,” said Gold.
More Jabs at Tan
Five months into his tenure as CEO and Lip-Bu Tan is facing more challenges to his authority, this time from former CEO Craig Barrett, who led Intel from 1998 to 2005. In a guest opinion piece for Fortune, Barrett argued that Intel is the only US company capable of matching TSMC at the leading edge but lacks the capital to do so, even with CHIPS Act funding. Barrett said neither TSMC nor Samsung intends to bring their most advanced manufacturing processes to the US (and he’s not wrong about that).
“The only place the cash can come from is the customers,” he wrote, proposing Intel’s eight largest customers, including Apple, Google, and Nvidia, should each contribute $5 billion in return for guaranteed domestic supply and pricing leverage against Asian competitors.