Intel: The Ultimate Downfall

thumbnails/Screen_Shot_2025-04-21_at_00.40.22.png thumbnail image
Sean Hui
April 6, 2025
Written by Sean Hui
Est read: 8 minutes

At the end of 2024, Intel's annual YTD share price plummeted by nearly 60%. Not only has  Intel been replaced by Nvidia and has been removed from the Dow Jones Index, but its  market value has also fallen below 100 billion US dollars. At the same time, Intel is also  facing a series of negative news. Qualcomm was once reported to be seeking to acquire Intel.

There were also rumours to sell factories, lay off employees, sell subsidiaries, and was even  jointly sued by many shareholders for management's potential "false financial statements". In the following, we shall delve into the history of Intel, and the downfall of the once industry leader.

History

Intel has dominated the PC market for more than 30 consecutive years from 1991. At its peak, Intel had a market share of over 80%.

In the past, Intel had three major moats. The IDM model, the design manufacturer that holds  x86 patents, and a brilliant sales strategy. Under these three moats, Intel's sales have soared  under these three moats, escorting it to the position of industry leader for many years. According to multiple data rankings, Intel has entered the top ten in the global  semiconductor market since 1987. From 1991 to 2021, it only fell to second place three  times in the past thirty years. At other times, it has been ranked first. At its peak, Intel's  market cap has exceeded US$500 billion.

Even after the technology bubble burst in 2000, Intel's market cap has slowly recovered to  the level of US$300 billion. But after 2021, Intel's stock price plummeted. What caused the decline of the former "monopoly" with such a brilliant record? In fact, Intel's problems have  been buried for more than ten years.

Intel's Strategic Failures

Intel’s decline can be integrated into three main issues: missed the mobile phase, flopped in  GPUs &AI, and loss of CPU dominance.

In 2006, with the popularization of 3G networks, using mobile phones to surf the Internet  became a fashion. The mobile Internet era was about to begin. However, Intel missed this wave. The main reasons were two: wrong partnerships and sold the wrong business.

Back in 2006, Steve Jobs was planning on the first-generation iPhone and hoped that Intel  could provide it with processors. However, Paul Otellini, the CEO of Intel at the time, refused  to provide CPUs for Apple. The reason being that Intel thought that the profits of the business  were too low. This may seem reasonable at that time, but Intel miscalculated one factor - the future shipment volume of the mobile phone market will be much larger than that of the PC market.

Years later, with the release of the original iPhone and the wave of mobile internet, mobile  phones gradually replaced computers and became the largest traffic portal on the Internet. At this time, Intel finally realized its mistakes and hoped to return to the mobile market. With  regards, they found two giants at the time as partners: one being Microsoft and the other  being Nokia. However, as according to history, this can be said to be a "loser alliance" combination. And in the end, Intel officially withdrew from the mobile phone market in 2016. The previous investment of US$10 billion in the field of mobile Internet was in vain. Intel  launched its first independent graphics card i740 in 1998, but only a year later it announced its decision to integrate the i740 iteration i752 on the main version and canceled the independent graphics card.

Later, in 2010, Intel itself admitted that the power density of the x86 core was indeed not as  good as other architectures of GPUs. But in the next ten years, no improvements have been  shown and Intel has been absent from the independent graphics card market. Intel missed  the mining boom and missed AI. The company terminated multiple AI projects due to budget constraints that could have been influential.

Perhaps is the guilt of missing such a big opportunity, after former CEO Gelsinger’s return to  Intel in 2021, he proposed to return to the graphics card market. A year later, Intel Arc series  graphics cards arrived as promised, but the game market pattern at this time has been determined. The late-arriving Arc graphics cards still failed to shake the status of AMD and  Nvidia, the two red and green manufacturers, due to insufficient game driver adaptation and  lack of ecology.

Looking back at Intel's entire graphics card development history, we found that Intel has  never paid enough attention to this business. In fact, as early as 2005, Otellini proposed to  acquire Nvidia, but the board of directors believed that the acquisition was too expensive  and therefore strongly resisted. In addition to missing the graphics card market, Intel's other  pain is missing out on AI. In 2017, OpenAI, which was founded just over a year ago, began  discussing cooperation with Intel. Intel could acquire 15% of OpenAI's shares for only $1  billion in cash. If Intel was willing to provide hardware equipment for OpenAI at cost price, it  could also obtain an additional 15% of the shares, which is a total of 30%.

As expected, I believe everyone can guess that in 2018, Intel once again rejected the  opportunity to get rich. The then CEO Bob Swan believes that it is too early for AI to enter the  market, and the investment will definitely lose money. This reason seems a bit untenable. If Intel really does not value AI, then what was the purpose of it acquiring Nervana Systems, a startup that makes AI chips back in 2016?

DCVC | Nervana Systems

People familiar with the matter added that another reason why the deal failed was because Intel's data center division was unwilling to open up the door to cut prices, which would  affect future profits. Intel originally missed out on the 30% stake in OpenAI that is now worth  $47.1 billion. Now that Intel also intends to develop in the direction of AI, what did they do  after acquiring Nervana? On August 20, 2019, Nervana released NNP-T and Nervana NNP-I.  However, less than half a year later, Intel switched. In December 2019, Intel acquired  another AI chip company, Habana Labs. The AI chip they produced is called Gaudi. NNP-T and NNP-I have been hidden in the snow. Perhaps the reason for giving up Nervana is the  same as giving up i752 and Larrabee graphics cards.

Missing the growth point not once but twice caused Intel to be widened by its opponents.  But the most fatal thing is that now even the CPU business that it was the proudest of in the past has begun to lose. In Intel's hypothesis, the chip design is improved year by year, and the chip manufacturing is  improved like a pendulum. This plan is also named "Pendulum Plan", but in 2016, it  happened to be the production process. Generally speaking, the smaller the nm reached the  better the functionality is the chip. However, in the development years, Intel has been stuck  at the 14nm node. Since Intel’s IDM model only makes chips for itself, when the old  equipment is no longer useful, spreading the equipment cost evenly over the annual chips will lead to lower profit margins. If the R&D expenses can be reduced by improving the old equipment, the profit margin for each chip will increase. However, the result of betting on  DUV (deep ultraviolet lithography machines) is that from 2015 to 2021, Intel has been stuck  at 14nm while TSMC has already reached 5nm.

In 2022, Intel's revenue share in the data center dropped by 10% and was divided up by other competitors led by AMD. According to Mercury Research, by the second quarter of 2024, AMD's revenue share in the server market was 33.7%, and the average selling price was  higher than Intel. It controlled the high-end market just when Intel had internal problems.

AMD Unveils New AI PC Processors as Competition With Nvidia and Intel Heats  Up

What makes it worse is that as NVIDIA GPU becomes the main equipment of AI data center,  NVIDIA begins to use Grace on some products, for example bundle sales of CPUs and GPUs,  such as the latest GB200. At the same time, we cannot ignore the change in the server  paradigm in the AI era, which has caused the server CPU market to begin to shrink. From a  CPU-centered server to an accelerator- centered server, whether it is GPU or ASIC, this  paradigm shift has led to the CPU's share in the entire server processor market to continue  to shrink.

Why did Intel Decline?

Speaking of Intel’s ultimate downfall, perhaps we can take a look at Intel’s board of directors. According to the information disclosed on Intel’s official website, the board of directors  previously had 11 members when Pat Gelsinger left. When we look at these 11 directors,  surprisingly we can find only 2 of them have a proficiency in semiconductors. Moreover, when Stacy J. Smith joined in March 2024 to replace the outgoing director Li-Bu Chen, there  was only one industry veteran in the entire board of directors.

According to industry insiders, leading the operation of a semiconductor company requires very deep industry experience and accumulation. The underlying reason is because semiconductors are not like AI. AI is a relatively new industry, but semiconductors are not. There is a lot of experience that you will not understand without going through it. Thus, it is foreseeable that the board of directors lacks proficiency because people don't know what to  talk about at all. According to senior chip field analyst Doug O'Laughlin's description of Intel’s board of directors being on autopilot for a long time is, to use a more elegant word, a runaway horse.

Conclusion

How Intel's $108 billion buyback gambit backfired—a cautionary tale for  tech giants | Ctech

Looking back at Intel's various failures, there are a few words that comes to my mind: profit margin, conservatism, and arrogance. The Wall Street Journal also made an analogy between Boeing and Intel and commented that the corporate cultures of the two companies have gradually developed to prioritize financial performance over engineering excellence.

Before 2018, Intel’s manufacturing process had always been in an absolutely leading position. As a result, its design department actually relied more or less on the advantages of its own chip manufacturing department, thus making it not radical or innovative enough.

But where is Intel's future? Although the market is quite pessimistic now, and I do believe that the board of directors of this company lacks ability, but there might be still exit opportunities out there, perhaps being acquired by Qualcomm or TSMC?