Intel Reclaims Full Ownership of Irish Fab in $14.2B Buyback, Shares Surge Amid AI Demand

April 1, 2026
Intel Reclaims Full Ownership of Irish Fab in $14.2B Buyback, Shares Surge Amid AI Demand
  • Intel will repurchase a 49% stake in its Fab 34 manufacturing joint venture in Ireland from Apollo Global Management for $14.2 billion, effectively regaining full ownership of the facility.

  • This move signals stronger financial footing and confidence in Intel’s manufacturing, with shares rising more than 6% at the market open as AI infrastructure demand picks up.

  • The 2024 deal left Apollo-backed funds with a minority stake for $11.2 billion; the new buyback reverses that arrangement to strengthen Intel’s balance sheet and long-term strategy.

  • Despite a quarterly earnings beat, management issued softer current-period guidance, underscoring that the turnaround remains a work in progress.

  • Industry tailwinds include robust AI infrastructure demand, a push for domestic semiconductor production, and sovereignty considerations regarding Taiwan, all shaping Intel’s positioning amid competition from Nvidia, AMD, and hyperscaler silicon.

  • Foundry remains central, with improving yields on the 18A node and design wins from Arm-based designers, aided by CHIPS Act funding supporting fab investments in multiple states.

  • Two growth narratives are visible: Intel rebuilding manufacturing credibility and AMD expanding its AI data-center franchise, suggesting divergent risk-reward for investors.

  • In Q4 2025, Intel posted adjusted EPS of 15 cents on revenue of about $13.67 billion, signaling early traction from Gaudi 3 AI accelerators and Panther Lake processors unveiled at CES 2026.

  • AMD’s enterprise moves, including a joint venture with Cisco and HUMAIN to deploy AI infrastructure and an OpenAI deployment pact for extensive GPU use, underpin its enterprise growth.

  • Investors are watching whether Intel’s 18A commercial rollout can close the foundry gap and whether AMD’s Upstage deal translates into sustained revenue, with first-quarter 2026 guidance indicating solid growth.

  • Under IDM 2.0, Intel aims to design chips and build a leading foundry business to win external customers, reversing past market-share losses to rivals.

Summary based on 10 sources


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