Every Chip Stock Investor Should Hold a Position in Intel, and We Were Just Reminded Why

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The prospect of tighter U.S. restrictions on exports to China and recent comments from presidential candidate Donald Trump knocked some of the wind out of chip stocks. Semiconductor stocks slid as the Biden administration floated the prospect of tougher trade restrictions on the industry while Trump suggested that if elected, he would want Taiwan to pay the U.S. for its defense. Taiwan, home to leading foundry operator Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE: TSM), captures about 62% of the revenue generated globally by chip foundries, according to TrendForce.  Concerns about the future led to a sell-off in TSMC as well as stocks like Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) and Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD), which depend on TSMC's fabs for production and also reported significant sales to China.

One of the few stocks that responded positively to this news from the presidential candidates was Intel (NASDAQ: INTC), whose stock price spiked sharply higher in Wednesday trading before pulling back for a modest gain. And while that surge of enthusiasm waned quickly, it was a reminder of why serious semiconductor industry investors should have at least some Intel stock in their portfolios.

The state of Intel

Admittedly, Intel's heyday is likely long behind it. It lags behind AMD on the chip design side of the business, and its new third-party fab operation, Intel Foundry Services (IFS), is behind TSMC and Samsung in terms of process technology.

However, Intel has the advantage of location: Most of its foundries are outside of East Asia. Thus, when political figures raise the prospect of trade restrictions or say things that intensify concerns that China could invade Taiwan, investors look to Intel as a safer bet.

The supposition that China will invade Taiwan is speculation. What is not speculated is that the chip foundry industry is concentrated in Taiwan. To this end, the U.S. and other Western governments are offering chipmakers tens of billions of dollars worth of subsidies to build more advanced fabs in the U.S. and Europe.

Such subsidies benefit Intel and its plans to build state-of-the-art fabs. Additionally, since it is buying the most advanced chip-manufacturing equipment from ASML, its potential to catch up to its competitors rapidly is better than some might assume.

Making sense of Intel's financials

As a result of its investments in building out manufacturing capacity, Intel's financials are improving, but still struggling. In the first quarter, its revenue rose 9% year over year to $13 billion. That was a notable improvement from its 14% revenue decline in the full year of 2023.