Intel's current customer challenge
Intel Foundry has accumulated over $15 billion in expected lifetime deal value, but the customer roster reveals a business heavily dependent on government contracts and struggling to gain commercial traction.
More critically, external foundry revenue remains a tiny fraction of Intel's overall business—roughly $875 million of the company's $17.5 billion in foundry revenue in 2024, or about 5%. This means the foundry business, despite massive investments, is still in its early innings with enormous room to grow.
Key commercial customers:
- Microsoft: The flagship win, announced February 2024, manufacturing a custom chip design (likely an AI accelerator) on Intel's 18A process for production in 2025-2026
- MediaTek: Manufacturing chips for smart edge devices like TVs and routers using Intel's mature 16nm process
- Amazon Web Services and Cisco: Using Intel's advanced packaging services (EMIB technology for chiplet interconnects) rather than wafer manufacturing
- Nvidia: September 2025 partnership focused on advanced packaging and joint x86/GPU development representing a $5 billion Nvidia investment, but no confirmed GPU manufacturing commitments
Notably absent from Intel's customer list: no confirmed smartphone chip customers, no confirmed AI accelerator customers beyond Microsoft, minimal Asian customer base, and limited hyperscaler commitments beyond Microsoft.
For a foundry business that needs massive scale to justify Intel's $100+ billion manufacturing investments, this represents both a challenge and an opportunity—there's still a vast market Intel hasn't captured.
Why AMD changes everything
The Intel-AMD talks represent more than just a potential business deal—they signal a fundamental shift in how the semiconductor industry operates.
Why this matters for Intel: Landing AMD as a customer—even for select products—provides the high-profile validation Intel's foundry business needs. When outside customers represent only 5% of your foundry revenue, getting your direct competitor to trust you with their manufacturing sends a powerful message to other potential clients.
The broader benefits: For AMD, this diversifies supply chains and reduces dependence on TSMC amid growing concerns about Taiwan's geopolitical situation. For the U.S. government, which invested $7.86 billion in Intel through the CHIPS Act and took a 9.9% stake in the company, the partnership supports strategic objectives around domestic chip manufacturing and supply chain security.
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