Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Intel's fall from grace seemed to happen all at once.Shares of the once iconic chipmaker plummeted 60% in 2024. The company posted the biggest loss in its 56-year history in its latest quarterly ...
Shares of Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) plunged 60.1% lower in 2024, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence. The semiconductor veteran ran into many issues last year, and the string of bad ...
Shares of Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) were spiraling again last month as the surprise "retirement" of former CEO Pat Gelsinger offered more evidence of the disarray the company is in as it struggles to ...
Intel's fall from grace was caused by manufacturing problems, product delays, market share losses, and jarring strategic shifts under three CEOs. ... But over the past decade, it slipped behind ...
Most potential buyers of Intel would likely focus on cost-cutting and see little value in a money-losing manufacturing subsidiary (known in the industry as a foundry).
Between 2020 and 2023, there was a worldwide chip shortage affecting more than 169 industries, [1] which led to major price increases, long queues, and reselling among consumers and manufacturers for automobiles, graphics cards, video game consoles, computers, household appliances, and other consumer electronics that require integrated circuits (commonly called "chips").
Intel is one of the biggest stakeholders in the self-driving car industry, having joined the race in mid 2017 [205] after joining forces with Mobileye. [206] The company is also one of the first in the sector to research consumer acceptance, after an AAA report quoted a 78% nonacceptance rate of the technology in the U.S. [ 207 ]
On the last day of the month, Intel got a reprieve after Bloomberg reported that the company was looking into potential strategic options, including separating the manufacturing business from the ...