Computers New Intel boss announces "painful decisions"

SDA

24.4.2025 - 23:13

The chip company Intel is cutting back. (archive picture)
The chip company Intel is cutting back. (archive picture)
Keystone

The new boss of the crisis-ridden chip company Intel has announced "painful decisions" just a few weeks after taking up his post and held out the prospect of job cuts. Intel must reduce costs and remove bureaucratic hurdles, said Lip-Bu Tan.

Keystone-SDA

This would also involve cutting jobs, the CEO emphasized on Thursday (local time) after the presentation of quarterly figures.

Chief Financial Officer David Zinsner said at the same time that Intel could not yet give any figures on the extent of the job cuts. The company also wants to reduce costs in other ways. The financial service Bloomberg recently reported that Intel could soon announce the reduction of around a fifth of its jobs. The number of Intel employees had already fallen to just under 109,000 by the end of last year from a good 124,000 at the end of September.

Top position lost

Intel once dominated the semiconductor market, but has been struggling with problems for years. Graphics card specialist Nvidia has gained a leading position, particularly in the business with chips for artificial intelligence. Intel is also under greater pressure in its traditional business with PC processors and chips for data centers.

Industry veteran Lip-Bu Tan was appointed to the top of the Group in mid-March. His predecessor Pat Gelsinger had tried to establish Intel as a contract manufacturer for other chip developers for the first time with new production techniques. He had to resign in December as he was only making slow progress.

Magdeburg plant in limbo

Part of the plan was to build new factories worth billions, including one in Magdeburg, Germany. This project was initially put on hold in September for an estimated two years. But work on a huge plant in Ohio in the USA has also been suspended. Lip-Bu Tan now said that Intel first wanted to ensure that existing capacities were used efficiently before releasing money for expansion.

Outlook disappointed

Intel disappointed investors with its sales forecast for the current quarter. The shares fell by a good five percent in after-hours trading. Intel forecast revenues of between 11.2 and 12.4 billion dollars for the second quarter. Analysts had expected an average forecast of around 12.8 billion dollars.

From the investors' point of view, this weighed more heavily than the results of the first quarter, in which Intel exceeded market expectations. Sales stagnated at 12.7 billion dollars, while analysts had expected a decline to 12.3 billion dollars on average. At the bottom line, the loss of 800 million dollars was twice as high as a year ago. However, Intel's adjusted earnings per share of 0.13 dollars clearly exceeded analysts' forecasts of just 0.01 dollars.