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Intel Corporation engages in the design, manufacture, and sale of computer products and technologies worldwide.
The company operates through CCG, DCG, IOTG, Mobileye, NSG, PSG, and All Other segments. It offers platform products, such as central processing units and chipsets, and system-on-chip and multichip packages; and non-platform or adjacent products, including accelerators, boards and systems, connectivity products, graphics, and memory and storage products. The company also provides high-performance compute solutions for targeted verticals and embedded applications for retail, industrial, and healthcare markets; and solutions for assisted and autonomous driving comprising compute platforms, computer vision and machine learning-based sensing, mapping and localization, driving policy, and active sensors. In addition, it offers workload-optimized platforms and related products for cloud service providers, enterprise and government, and communications service providers. The company serves original equipment manufacturers, original design manufacturers, and cloud service providers. Intel Corporation has a strategic partnership with MILA to develop and apply advances in artificial intelligence methods for enhancing the search in the space of drugs.
The company was incorporated in 1968 and is headquartered in Santa Clara, California.
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In the latest trading session, Intel (INTC) closed at $62.38, marking a +1.07% move from the previous day.

Intel currently generates a higher volume of total sales, but Advanced Micro Devices displays a stronger upward trajectory in its top-line performance. Over the past eight quarters, Intel has experienced somewhat choppy and slower rate of growth, whereas Advanced Micro Devices has demonstrated a consistent pattern of strong quarterly increases.

Intel stock is in the midst of its longest winning streak since September 2023. Analysts see momentum continuing with headline-catching deals.

Tim Bohen with @Stockstotrade closes out another trading week with three names tied to the tech trade. He highlights smaller names Aehr Test Systems (AEHR), to rising giants like SanDisk (SNDK) and Intel (INTC).

Intel stands to benefit from a CPU boom and a growing array of partnerships, but an analyst notes it's “not out of the woods yet.”

INTC deepens AI infrastructure push with Alphabet partnership, powering Google Cloud with Xeon CPUs and co-developing custom IPUs to boost efficiency.
Intel and Qualcomm ramp up AI chip strategies, deepening partnerships and expanding portfolios as competition intensifies across key semiconductor markets.

Some AI stocks may have taken a hit lately, but solid underlying fundamentals suggest that the category can make a solid comeback by the end of 2026.

Top insights from the latest market news from Friday, April 10, from The Motley Fool analysts on Team Rule Breakers and Team Hidden Gems.

Intel Corporation deepens its partnership with Alphabet's Google, reinforcing Xeon CPUs' central role in hyperscale AI infrastructure. INTC is evolving from a component supplier to a strategic systems partner, co-designing architectures with custom IPUs for AI workloads. Despite AI's GPU focus, Xeon CPUs remain essential for data preprocessing, orchestration, and latency-sensitive services, ensuring durable demand.

CNBC's Jim Cramer said investors are favoring hardware over software, highlighting a persistent divide in tech and pointing to chip and infrastructure players as current winners.

Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) is up 33% this week amid a wave of Wall Street endorsements and high-profile collaborations, including a multi-year partnership with Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL) to develop AI and cloud infrastructure.

The S&P 500 may be on a hot streak but some of its stocks are absolutely on fire.

Lumentum and Coherent were gaining on signs of strong artificial-intelligence hardware demand, while Organon was boosted by a takeover report.