Chipmaker's Shares Experience Sudden Surge: Is This a Buying Opportunity or a Signal to Cash Out?

Table of Contents Shares of Intel experienced a dramatic 13% surge Tuesday, settling at $108.19 after reaching an intraday peak of $110.48. Trading activity exploded to 191 million shares — representing a 65% increase over normal daily volume. Intel Corporation, INTC This rally propelled Intel’s market capitalization to an unprecedented $544 billion. The semiconductor giant now ranks as the 17th largest U.S. company by market cap, surpassing both Oracle and Johnson & Johnson — a remarkable climb from 56th position at 2025’s conclusion. Since early 2026, the stock has tripled in value. This year’s performance is approximately eight times stronger than the top-performing Magnificent Seven stock, Alphabet, which has climbed 24% year-to-date. The primary driver behind Tuesday’s explosive move was news that Apple conducted preliminary discussions with Intel — alongside Samsung — regarding domestic production of its flagship device processors. Such a partnership would represent a transformative opportunity for Intel’s foundry operations, the centerpiece of CEO Lip-Bu Tan’s strategic revival plan. Intel also secured antitrust clearance for its planned SambaNova acquisition. This regulatory green light eliminates a significant uncertainty and reinforces Intel’s ambitions in the enterprise AI acceleration space. On the talent acquisition front, the company recruited Qualcomm veteran Alex Katouzian to oversee its PC division and emerging “physical AI” initiatives. This strategic hire signals Intel’s commitment to AI-powered edge computing and consumer applications — sectors poised for substantial growth in coming years. Broader market dynamics provided additional support. Both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq reached fresh record highs Tuesday, powered by strength across AI semiconductor stocks and diminishing geopolitical tensions. Intel benefited from this sector-wide momentum. Intel’s first-quarter financial results, unveiled April 23rd, supplied fundamental support for the rally. The company reported earnings per share of $0.29, dramatically exceeding the $0.01 analyst consensus. Revenue totaled $13.58 billion, topping the $12.32 billion estimate — representing a 7.4% year-over-year improvement. Foundry gross margin expansion is also gaining traction, a crucial development. This division has historically weighed on Intel’s overall profitability, making any operational improvements particularly significant for bullish investors. For the second quarter, Intel projects EPS of $0.20. Wall Street anticipates full-year earnings per share of $0.63. Skepticism remains, however. A senior Intel executive divested 40,256 shares on May 1st at an average price of $99.53 — totaling slightly over $4 million and representing a 27.7% reduction in her holdings. Analyst sentiment has been cautious. RBC maintained a neutral stance with an $80 price target. New Street Research elevated its target from $50 to $80 while keeping a neutral rating. Truist increased its objective from $49 to $81, also maintaining a hold recommendation. Among 41 analysts monitored by MarketBeat, 25 rate the stock Hold, 11 recommend Buy, one suggests Strong Buy, and four advise Sell. The consensus price target stands at $74.47 — nearly $34 beneath Tuesday’s closing price. Intel’s 50-day moving average rests at $54.62, while the 200-day moving average sits at $45.91. The stock is trading well above both technical benchmarks. The company exhibits a beta of 2.18 and a price-to-earnings ratio of -174.51. Institutional investors control 64.53% of outstanding shares.