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Intel CEO Signals That He’ll Stick With Contentious Foundry Plan

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(Bloomberg) -- Incoming Intel Corp. Chief Executive Officer Lip-Bu Tan is signaling that he’ll stick with his predecessor’s plan to make chips for other companies, even as he vows to learn from past mistakes.

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Tan, who was named to the CEO job on Wednesday, sent a letter to employees before meeting with staff in the afternoon, offering a rough sketch of his plans for the embattled chipmaker. Part of the message: He will keep working to make Intel a top foundry — a business that produces chips for outside clients. That endeavor has been costly for Intel so far, and contributed to the ouster of prior CEO Pat Gelsinger.

“We will work hard to restore Intel’s position as a world-class products company, establish ourselves as a world-class foundry and delight our customers like never before,” he said in the letter, which was published on Intel’s website. “That’s what this moment demands of us as we remake Intel for the future.”

Investors applauded the hiring of Tan, 65, despite the lack of a clear signal that he’ll take Intel in a new direction. The shares gained more than 10% in late trading Wednesday after the announcement.

The stock had rallied last month on anticipation that the company would be broken up — with Intel potentially separating the foundry business from its chip design group.

Plowing ahead with the foundry strategy means taking on Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. in a market that the Asian company pioneered. TSMC is dominant in the field, churning out chips for clients such as Nvidia Corp., Apple Inc. and Advanced Micro Devices Inc.

Intel spent most of its history just producing chips for itself, rather than outside customers. Its decades of dominance over the industry were built on the tight coupling of cutting-edge manufacturing and its own products, designed in-house. But the power of that combination has waned, and TSMC is able to produce more advanced components.

It’s still an open question whether Tan might split up the foundry and chip-design businesses, Srini Pajjuri, an analyst at Raymond James, said in a note to clients. Barring that move, Intel will have to demonstrate that it can produce better products.

Members of the Trump administration also have floated the idea of TSMC backing a spinoff of Intel’s factory business. But TSMC’s recent plan to invest $100 billion in its own factories suggests that it’s not aiming to pursue that idea.