Investing

Why Intel stock is soaring over 4% today

Intel stock (NASDAQ: INTC) surged over 4% in Tuesday’s late morning session, touching an intraday high of $47.21.

The move is not about a single headline, but about three converging reasons that are forcing Wall Street to rethink how it values Intel’s recovery.

The company’s manufacturing credibility, its foundry pipeline, and a wave of AI chip optimism are all hitting at once.

The chip that had to work

At the center of Tuesday’s momentum is Intel’s 18A process node, and the product it is now powering.

Intel Core Ultra Series 3, codenamed Panther Lake, launched at CES 2026 in January and became available on January 27.

These are the first Intel chips built entirely on 18A, the company’s most advanced manufacturing process, and the most advanced semiconductor node developed and manufactured in the United States.

The chips are built at Fab 52 in Chandler, Arizona, which is now in high-volume production.​

For investors, Panther Lake’s launch was not just a product event, it was a credibility test as Intel’s entire turnaround thesis rests on proving that 18A works at scale.

When former CEO Pat Gelsinger first outlined the foundry ambition years ago, the percentage of chips that come out functional were the big unknown.

A process node that can’t yield chips reliably is worthless, no matter how technically impressive it is on paper.

Panther Lake shipping on schedule is Wall Street’s first concrete proof that 18A delivers. That proof is being priced into the stock.

Intel’s massive ambitions

Intel’s ambitions go beyond making its own chips.

The company wants to manufacture chips for others as compete with Taiwan’s TSMC in the global foundry market.

That is a massive, high-margin opportunity. And CEO Lip-Bu Tan is now flagging real progress.

At the Cisco AI Summit in February, Tan disclosed that Intel had achieved 7–8% monthly yield improvements on 18A and issued a “0.5 PDK,” a Process Design Kit that lets potential customers start working on test chips using Intel’s process.

A PDK release is a significant milestone in the foundry business as it signals that Intel’s manufacturing process is stable enough for external designers to actually use.

Tan also noted that “a couple of customers” are now actively engaging with 18A, though he declined to name them for confidentiality reasons.

Volume customer commitments are expected in the second half of 2026.

In early March, Intel’s CFO David Zinsner confirmed that Tan is now formally positioning 18A as an external foundry offering.

Intel stock: AI sentiment lifts the whole sector

Intel is also catching a secondary bid on broader AI chip optimism.

Nvidia gained about 1.2% Tuesday, buoyed by its Thinking Machines partnership deal and growing excitement around NemoClaw, its open-source AI agent platform set to debut at GTC 2026.

When AI infrastructure sentiment runs positive, Intel benefits from a specific angle: it is one of the few chipmakers doing advanced semiconductor manufacturing entirely on US soil.

In a policy environment focused on domestic production, that domestic manufacturing story makes Intel a natural beneficiary of AI spending tailwinds.

The post Why Intel stock is soaring over 4% today appeared first on Invezz

    Sign up for our newsletter to receive the latest insights, updates, and exclusive content straight to your inbox! Whether it's industry news, expert advice, or inspiring stories, we bring you valuable information that you won't find anywhere else. Stay connected with us!

    By opting in you agree to receive emails from us and our affiliates. Your information is secure and your privacy is protected.