Intel prepares for $100 billion spending spree across four US states
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[March 20, 2024] By
Stephen Nellis
SANTA CLARA, California (Reuters) -Intel is planning a $100 billion
spending spree across four U.S. states to build and expand factories
after securing $19.5 billion in federal grants and loans - and it hopes
to secure another $25 billion in tax breaks.
The centerpiece of Intel's five-year spending plan is turning empty
fields near Columbus, Ohio, into what CEO Pat Gelsinger described to
reporters on Tuesday as "the largest AI chip manufacturing site in the
world" starting as soon as 2027.
The U.S. government announced the federal funds to Intel under the CHIPS
Act on Wednesday, sending its shares up 4% in premarket trading.
Intel's plan will also involve revamping sites in New Mexico and Oregon,
and expanding operations in Arizona, where longtime rival Taiwan
Semiconductor Manufacturing Co is also building a massive factory that
it hopes will receive funding from President Joe Biden's push to bring
advanced semiconductor manufacturing back to the U.S.
The funds provided by Biden's plan for a broader chip making renaissance
will go a long way to help Intel mend its wounded business model.
For decades, Intel led the world in making the fastest and smallest
semiconductors, selling them at a premium price and plowing the profits
back into more research and development to stay ahead of the pack.
But Intel lost that manufacturing edge in the 2010s to TSMC and its
profit margins plummeted as it cut prices to keep market share with
inferior products.
Gelsinger announced a plan in 2021 to return Intel to the No. 1
position, but to make the plan profitable, he has said he would need
government support.
With that assistance in hand, it's now time for Intel to spend.
Gelsinger said about 30% of the $100 billion plan will be spent on
construction costs such as labor, piping and concrete. The remaining
will go to buying chipmaking tools from firms such as ASML, Tokyo
Electron, Applied Materials and KLA, among others.
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Figurines with computers and smartphones are seen in front of Intel
logo in this illustration taken, February 19, 2024. REUTERS/Dado
Ruvic/Illustration/file photo
Those tools will help bring the Ohio site online by 2027 or 2028,
though Gelsinger warned the timeline could slip if the chip market
takes a dive. Beyond grants and loans, Intel plans to make most of
the purchases from its existing cash flows.
Gelsinger has previously said that a second round of U.S. funding
for chip factories likely will be needed to re-establish the United
States as a leader in semiconductor manufacturing, which he
reiterated on Tuesday.
"It took us three-plus decades to lose this industry. It's not going
to come back in three to five years of CHIPS Act" funding, said
Gelsinger, who referred to the low-interest-rate funding as "smart
capital".
However, even with the federal backing, Intel needs to show that it
can compete with its Taiwanese and Korean rivals sooner rather than
later, said Ben Bajarin, CEO of analyst firm Creative Strategies.
"It will be important to know how much longer 'smart capital' is
needed for Intel before they can stand on their own," Bajarin said.
Overall, though, Intel would be the most important chipmaker for
U.S. interests even as rivals build in the country, said Jimmy
Goodrich, a semiconductor export and technology adviser at RAND
Corp.
"Only Intel has the workforce, technology, and supply chain that is
largely U.S. centric. So while what TSMC and Samsung are doing here
is important and should be welcomed, it's also important to have a
strong home team," he said.
(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in Santa Clara, California; editing by
Peter Henderson, Christian Schmollinger and Varun H K)
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