Intel Hits $142 Peak in June, Slides Back Below $100 in July on Sector Pullback
Intel topped $142 in late June. July has seen broader sector profit-taking and cooling ahead of Q2 earnings, drawing INTC back below the $100 zone. .
Quick overview
- Intel's stock fell below $100 after reaching over $142 in June due to profit-taking and concerns about AI spending sustainability.
- Delays in achieving profitable yields on the 18A manufacturing process have disappointed investors, pushing expectations for recovery to late 2026 or 2027.
- The rollout of the Core Ultra Series 3 has improved client market share confidence, while server CPU growth and foundry business valuation are seen as key drivers for future earnings expansion.
- Challenges remain with high capital expenditures for ramping 18A and competition from AMD and TSMC in core market segments.
Intel topped $142 in late June but has seen broader sector profit-taking and cooling ahead of Q2 earnings, drawing INTC back below the $100 zone.
Chip stocks faced cooling sentiment amid concerns over AI spending sustainability and reports of potential slowdowns in areas like high-bandwidth memory (HBM).
Intel-specific updates — Delays in achieving profitable yields on the 18A manufacturing process (pushed to late 2026 or 2027) disappointed some investors who hoped for a faster recovery in Intel Foundry. Pre-earnings caution — With Q2 results scheduled for July 23, 2026, traders locked in gains ahead of the report.

The rollout of Core Ultra Series 3 across 200+ AI PC designs has significantly bolstered client market share confidence.
Enterprise and cloud providers are renewing server CPU refreshes to pair with AI accelerator clusters. Adoption of Xeon processors in platforms like NVIDIA’s DGX systems has reassured investors about Intel’s ongoing role in AI data center architecture.
Wall Street has increasingly begun valuing Intel’s foundry business as a standalone segment. Advanced packaging services (EMIB/Foveros) and external wafer commitments have created a long-term growth narrative separate from traditional x86 chip design.
Analysts (such as HSBC, carrying a Street-high $200 target) argue that server CPU growth (+20%–25% YoY) combined with foundry unlocks will drive a multi-year earnings expansion.
As manufacturing yields improve on internal nodes (away from external TSMC outsourcing), gross margins are expected to expand.
Ramping 18A and building out global fab sites require huge capital expenditures that could constrain free cash flow if yields lag expectations. Advanced AI accelerators continue to grab IT budget shares from traditional CPUs, and competitors (AMD, TSMC) remain formidable in core market segments.
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