WEBVTT - Bloomberg Technology Special: Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger

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<v Speaker 1>Bloomberg Audio Studios, podcasts, radio news from Mahard.

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<v Speaker 2>We're Innovation, Money and Power.

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<v Speaker 1>Collie in Silicon Vallet NBN.

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<v Speaker 2>This is Bloomberg Technology with Caroline Hyde and Ed Ludlow.

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<v Speaker 3>Live from San Francisco. To our TV and radio audiences

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<v Speaker 3>around the world. Welcome to a special edition of Bloomberg Technology.

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<v Speaker 1>I'm Ed Ludlow.

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<v Speaker 3>In just a few moments, Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger will

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<v Speaker 3>join us for a live interview following their latest earnings report,

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<v Speaker 3>the company giving a fourth quarter revenue forecast slightly above estimates,

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<v Speaker 3>but sparking optimism that Intel is capable of reclaiming some

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<v Speaker 3>lost market share in keycages.

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<v Speaker 1>The shares are really surging.

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<v Speaker 3>But it's also important to note two other giants of

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<v Speaker 3>the technology world have also reported numbers this evening. Apple,

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<v Speaker 3>the world's most valuable company, down two percentage points in

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<v Speaker 3>after hours. It grew in every geography around the world,

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<v Speaker 3>apart from in Greater China. iPhone revenue overall beat there's

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<v Speaker 3>much to unpick there. Amazon gave a strong forecast for

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<v Speaker 3>the final three months of this year, whether it's on

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<v Speaker 3>an operating income basis or a revenue basis, and a

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<v Speaker 3>return to growth in its cloud unit AWS. There is

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<v Speaker 3>some signal that Amazon is regaining momentum. We will check

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<v Speaker 3>in on all three names throughout the thirty minutes, but

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<v Speaker 3>a focus right now is in Intel. It had a

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<v Speaker 3>painful third quarter gone and it's given us a signal

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<v Speaker 3>about what might come next. Let's first of all, go

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<v Speaker 3>to Bloomberg's senior executive editor, Tom Giles, who leads technology

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<v Speaker 3>coverage in the newsroom.

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<v Speaker 1>Where to start.

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<v Speaker 3>You know, Intel has moved on really from a painful

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<v Speaker 3>third quarter and tried to tell us that it's regaining

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<v Speaker 3>footing going fullwood.

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<v Speaker 1>Take it from that.

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<v Speaker 4>Tull slightly Slightly is the key here. A lot of

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<v Speaker 4>what they did in the most recent quarter was they

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<v Speaker 4>slash costs, slashed expenses, They cut headcount. They have taken

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<v Speaker 4>a step back on investor payouts, so a lot of

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<v Speaker 4>this is about retrenching. They did give a forecast for

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<v Speaker 4>the fourth quarter that slightly exceeded analysts expectations. That was

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<v Speaker 4>enough to get the stock moving. It's definitely up and

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<v Speaker 4>after hours, but I look at the report and I

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<v Speaker 4>see that they are not out of the woods yet

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<v Speaker 4>by any stretch of the imagination. I look at their

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<v Speaker 4>orders for AI chips. There's still not a lot of

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<v Speaker 4>momentum there. They're not going to meet that five hundred

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<v Speaker 4>million dollar threshold that they had talked about. We are

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<v Speaker 4>still wondering about whether there's going to be interest after

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<v Speaker 4>the election from an outside company. Bloomberg has reported on

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<v Speaker 4>Qualcomm and their potential interest in an Intel deal. We've

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<v Speaker 4>also reported that they're going to put that off until

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<v Speaker 4>after the election, maybe not see a lot of movement

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<v Speaker 4>there until after the new year. This was an investors

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<v Speaker 4>are breathing a sigh of relief. But Gelsinger still has

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<v Speaker 4>a lot of explaining to do and a lot of

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<v Speaker 4>expectations that he still needs to live up.

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<v Speaker 3>To, and we will get the opportunity to put those

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<v Speaker 3>questions to him. Bloomberg, Tom Giles, thank you, stay with us.

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<v Speaker 3>I want to bring in Bloomberg's Ian King, who's led

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<v Speaker 3>semiconductor coverage in the Bloomberg newsroom since nineteen ninety.

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<v Speaker 1>Eight and for a lot of that time.

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<v Speaker 3>In all seriousness, Intel has led in certain products, right

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<v Speaker 3>chips that go into PCs in some sense data center.

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<v Speaker 3>But the quarter that just happened, their third quarter was painful.

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<v Speaker 3>Billions of dollars of impairment charges, headcount reduction. Take that

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<v Speaker 3>and explain why it's so important for this chip company

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<v Speaker 3>to have taken those actions.

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<v Speaker 5>Yeah, I mean Pat Gelsing has spelt it out. He said,

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<v Speaker 5>we are resizing the company for the size of revenue

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<v Speaker 5>that we expect going forward. And going forward we expect

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<v Speaker 5>maybe three to five percent growth. If we push it,

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<v Speaker 5>maybe we'll get into the sort of seven percent range.

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<v Speaker 5>So that is a long way off what Intel's direct

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<v Speaker 5>compares are doing right now, particularly in that AI chip market.

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<v Speaker 3>Ian one more to you please. You spoke to Pat

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<v Speaker 3>Gelsinger on the phone very quickly. Their business is split

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<v Speaker 3>in two. There's the chips that they make that go

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<v Speaker 3>into Pcason data centers. Then there's the manufacturing business. Gelsinger

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<v Speaker 3>explained to you sort of the plan to run them

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<v Speaker 3>as distinct divisions, but within one whole company.

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<v Speaker 5>Yeah, he's talking about them being sort of better to

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<v Speaker 5>be split but still together, which he was asked about

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<v Speaker 5>again on the call, And people are still kind of

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<v Speaker 5>struggling with this. It's like, well, how come if you're

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<v Speaker 5>splitting them up, you're not going to go the whole

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<v Speaker 5>way and split up the company and His point is like, no, no,

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<v Speaker 5>we need to manage the overall finances and guess what,

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<v Speaker 5>the majority of work that's going to be done in

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<v Speaker 5>those factories is go to be our chips for the

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<v Speaker 5>next couple of years.

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<v Speaker 3>That's the Bloomberg News reporting on the numbers that Intel posted.

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<v Speaker 3>You see them on the screen there, thanks to Bloomberg,

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<v Speaker 3>Zy and King. Let's get reaction from the investment community.

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<v Speaker 3>Joanne Feine is Advisor's capital management partner and portfolio manager

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<v Speaker 3>actually currently with no exposure to Intel, but you're someone

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<v Speaker 3>who's covered semiconductors semi capital equipment for many years at

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<v Speaker 3>multiple firms. Just your reaction to the Intel print and

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<v Speaker 3>what they told us about their progress.

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<v Speaker 6>You know, they made a lot of progress, and that's

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<v Speaker 6>an important step forward. They had a lot of cost

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<v Speaker 6>cutting to do. They seem like they got a lot

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<v Speaker 6>of it done last quarter, which is why we're seeing

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<v Speaker 6>such a big charge, which had a large impact on

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<v Speaker 6>that adjusted EPs. But you know, as Ian just said

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<v Speaker 6>that they have a long way to go because they

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<v Speaker 6>are taking a huge hit on their gross margin by outsourcing,

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<v Speaker 6>and that reflects the lack of execution in the past

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<v Speaker 6>on the manufacturing side.

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<v Speaker 1>And it isn't just to an end.

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<v Speaker 6>We didn't get good news about that this quarter. It's

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<v Speaker 6>in fact really not going to play through until twenty

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<v Speaker 6>twenty six when they rant Panther Lake in real volume.

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<v Speaker 6>And even then, on the call, Pat Gelsinger said that

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<v Speaker 6>seventy percent will be in house, but thirty percent will not,

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<v Speaker 6>And I think that's a smart business decision. They have

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<v Speaker 6>to be a reliable provider of that chip, and if

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<v Speaker 6>there's any kind of hiccup in the yields they're going

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<v Speaker 6>to get on Panther Lake, they had better have another

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<v Speaker 6>source so they can meet their customer demands. But you know,

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<v Speaker 6>the gross margin is everything. They've gone from over sixty

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<v Speaker 6>percent down to under forty percent. Yes, and that's because

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<v Speaker 6>they haven't executed.

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<v Speaker 1>Now.

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<v Speaker 6>I've always said that if somebody can write the ship,

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<v Speaker 6>it's Pat Gelsinger, a former Intel guy and back at

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<v Speaker 6>the Helm, and he's made incredible progress. He and Dave's

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<v Speaker 6>Inzer have made incredible progress here this last.

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<v Speaker 3>Quarter, and the stock is markedly higher and after hours.

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<v Speaker 3>In a minute, I'm going to ask Ian about that

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<v Speaker 3>kind of history of Intel and its leadership in the

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<v Speaker 3>field of semi conductors. AI accelerators. Those are the GPUs,

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<v Speaker 3>the high performance chips that we've all been talking about,

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<v Speaker 3>because they go into data centers and they use to

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<v Speaker 3>train AI models. And what Intel told us is that

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<v Speaker 3>their version of that Goudy is not getting traction nowhere

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<v Speaker 3>near the traction frankly that in video and AMD to

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<v Speaker 3>a lesser extent of getting What did you make of that, Joan.

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<v Speaker 6>Yeah, they're a distant follower and it's going to take

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<v Speaker 6>them a lot to really make any inroads there. And

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<v Speaker 6>it isn't just in video and AMD's new products, but

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<v Speaker 6>it's also custom silicon that are coming out of the

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<v Speaker 6>cloud guys themselves, like Google for example, working with Broadcom,

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<v Speaker 6>Open Ai also evidently working with Broadcom. So there's a

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<v Speaker 6>lot of players already there that have really outstanding products

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<v Speaker 6>and you can see that in their soft guidance for

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<v Speaker 6>twenty twenty five. They're targeting three to five percent revenue growth.

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<v Speaker 6>That's what they're managing the business to and that really

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<v Speaker 6>does reflect the different opportunity Intel has. It isn't just

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<v Speaker 6>the AI accelerators, it's also that they've lost so much

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<v Speaker 6>market share in server to AMD Okay. They used to

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<v Speaker 6>be ninety seven percent. Now they're just around forty percent.

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<v Speaker 3>Those are one of the questions that we'll get to you, Dranfeeni,

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<v Speaker 3>stay with us for a moment. I want to go

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<v Speaker 3>back to Bloomberg's Ian King. Historically, Intel was the leader

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<v Speaker 3>in the product categories, but also in its margins. It

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<v Speaker 3>was a company that had sixty percent margins or above.

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<v Speaker 3>That is not the case anymore.

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<v Speaker 5>Why Historically, what the massive advantage that they had was

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<v Speaker 5>the best factories in the industry. Right These factories coust

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<v Speaker 5>multiple tens of billions of dollars to put in the ground.

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<v Speaker 5>But if they're good and if they give you better products,

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<v Speaker 5>that's an asset. Right now, that is the reverse where

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<v Speaker 5>they are not the best and they are weighing on

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<v Speaker 5>the margins. And as we talked about it, and that

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<v Speaker 5>was all of the questions they got, when are these advancements?

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<v Speaker 1>Were the answers, well, two years.

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<v Speaker 3>And what do you mean by So there's this foundry business,

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<v Speaker 3>and part of it is serving Intel. They're their own

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<v Speaker 3>biggest customer in the first instance, but they've named some

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<v Speaker 3>pretty impressive people out there that they hope to manufacture

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<v Speaker 3>chips for. There seems to be now a timeline building

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<v Speaker 3>and when that might happen.

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<v Speaker 5>Yeah, I mean the optimistic view is like, now we've

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<v Speaker 5>made our factories great again. Now they're good. That'll help

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<v Speaker 5>our products and it will also help us attract outside money.

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<v Speaker 5>The analyst are turning around and saying, well, when and

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<v Speaker 5>what's happening in the interim is, as Johanne said, they're

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<v Speaker 5>still outsourcing a big chunk of their best stuff. So

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<v Speaker 5>obviously that's horrendous margins and it has the negative impact

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<v Speaker 5>of if you've got factories and you're not running them

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<v Speaker 5>flat out making your best stuff, that's not a place

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<v Speaker 5>where you want to be in this.

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<v Speaker 1>Industry, Joanne.

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<v Speaker 3>When I moved to California six years ago, Intel was

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<v Speaker 3>part of the law and history of Silicon Valley. It's

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<v Speaker 3>why people speak about them in that respect. In the

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<v Speaker 3>court of gone, they took very painful decisions. And when

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<v Speaker 3>I posted on social media that Pat Gelsinger was doing

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<v Speaker 3>this special program, many voice support for him, but did say, look,

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<v Speaker 3>there are some very difficult questions we still have. What

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<v Speaker 3>would your difficult question be for him?

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<v Speaker 6>How are you going to bring that gross margin up?

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<v Speaker 6>And I guess the second one, and related is how

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<v Speaker 6>do you convince potential foundry customers that they're going to

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<v Speaker 6>get priority in those wafer starts when they need them?

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<v Speaker 6>And that's always been the challenge in eras past. When

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<v Speaker 6>Intel has talked about starting a foundry business, the concern

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<v Speaker 6>among potential customers was, how do we know we're going

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<v Speaker 6>to get the wafer starts that you promise us? How

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<v Speaker 6>do we know you're not going to prioritize your own products?

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<v Speaker 6>And then secondly, do they have the extensive libraries that

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<v Speaker 6>they need to build chips for other companies? And that's

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<v Speaker 6>a set of libraries that obviously have built up over many,

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<v Speaker 6>many years and decades at TSMC and Samsung, But it's

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<v Speaker 6>a new thing for Intel, and can they execute to

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<v Speaker 6>build other companies' products as well as they do for

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<v Speaker 6>their own.

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<v Speaker 3>Amtheenia of Advisors, Capital Management, and of course Bloomberg's Ian King.

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<v Speaker 3>Thank you to you both. Now we are joined by

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<v Speaker 3>the Intel CEO, Pat Gelsinger, who's come straight from the

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<v Speaker 3>company's call with analysts. Kindly, you are joining us live

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<v Speaker 3>on Bloomberg Television and Radio, and Pat, thank you for

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<v Speaker 3>your time.

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<v Speaker 1>In the quarter gone.

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<v Speaker 3>We were just talking about how you made painful decisions,

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<v Speaker 3>and those showed up as impairment charges and were reflected

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<v Speaker 3>on the bottom line to start, Could I ask if

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<v Speaker 3>that's it now that those actions are taken and you

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<v Speaker 3>now have line of sight on what you want to do,

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<v Speaker 3>or if there will be more sort of restructure to come.

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<v Speaker 7>Yeah, we worked very hard this quarter to get this

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<v Speaker 7>done and the people actions, the restructuring chargers you'll largely

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<v Speaker 7>finished this quarter, so it was a challenging quarter that way,

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<v Speaker 7>but to also deliver better than expect the results if

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<v Speaker 7>we eliminate those one time chargers and to take our

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<v Speaker 7>guidance up for Q four.

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<v Speaker 2>I'm very proud of our team being able to do

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<v Speaker 2>both of those this quarter.

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<v Speaker 7>Some of the most difficult restructuring charges maybe in the

0:12:05.720 --> 0:12:09.439
<v Speaker 7>history of Intel since our memory microprocessor decision almost forty

0:12:09.520 --> 0:12:12.959
<v Speaker 7>years ago. Getting that done and still beating results and

0:12:13.000 --> 0:12:16.600
<v Speaker 7>taking the guide up, this was a very significant quarter

0:12:16.679 --> 0:12:21.000
<v Speaker 7>for our team to execute. Very proud of their discipline results.

0:12:21.960 --> 0:12:24.960
<v Speaker 3>Pat the investor base of cheering you. I'm going on

0:12:25.000 --> 0:12:27.720
<v Speaker 3>the reaction of your stock in after hours, but a

0:12:27.720 --> 0:12:29.760
<v Speaker 3>lot of that does seem to be a focus on

0:12:29.840 --> 0:12:32.319
<v Speaker 3>what you were guiding to in the final three months

0:12:32.320 --> 0:12:35.400
<v Speaker 3>of this year. Away from sort of the financials and numbers,

0:12:35.440 --> 0:12:38.240
<v Speaker 3>could you talk a little bit about the product business

0:12:38.280 --> 0:12:41.400
<v Speaker 3>and the foundry business that gave you some confidence in

0:12:41.440 --> 0:12:42.120
<v Speaker 3>that guide.

0:12:43.040 --> 0:12:45.360
<v Speaker 7>Yeah, and if we take it apart a little bit,

0:12:45.400 --> 0:12:49.800
<v Speaker 7>the client business, we've launched our lunar Lake product, the

0:12:49.840 --> 0:12:55.000
<v Speaker 7>second generation of our AIPC and the AIPC category very solid.

0:12:55.040 --> 0:12:58.560
<v Speaker 7>We'll be launching the commercial version of that into a

0:12:59.200 --> 0:13:02.720
<v Speaker 7>good market, believe next year for a Windows refresh, a

0:13:02.800 --> 0:13:06.440
<v Speaker 7>corporate refresh cycle, and we start to see more strength

0:13:06.480 --> 0:13:10.439
<v Speaker 7>in the AIPC category overall, with strong set of use

0:13:10.520 --> 0:13:14.440
<v Speaker 7>cases and ISVs bringing new software into the marketplace. So

0:13:14.679 --> 0:13:17.880
<v Speaker 7>we feel good about the client business. Data center quarter

0:13:17.960 --> 0:13:20.800
<v Speaker 7>on quarter a little bit better than people forecast for

0:13:20.840 --> 0:13:24.640
<v Speaker 7>that business, and a stronger product line with our Xeon

0:13:24.840 --> 0:13:28.840
<v Speaker 7>six products now starting to ramp, you know. And finally

0:13:28.880 --> 0:13:32.560
<v Speaker 7>on the Intel foundry quarter and quarter growth in that area,

0:13:32.920 --> 0:13:37.440
<v Speaker 7>and a strong pipeline of external customers. We announced Amazon

0:13:37.559 --> 0:13:41.560
<v Speaker 7>and two other AT and A customers, some additional advanced

0:13:41.600 --> 0:13:45.040
<v Speaker 7>packaging customers. So we're starting to see that business come

0:13:45.120 --> 0:13:48.719
<v Speaker 7>to life. And that's a long term business because when

0:13:48.720 --> 0:13:52.640
<v Speaker 7>people move designs, it takes several years for major designs

0:13:52.679 --> 0:13:54.800
<v Speaker 7>to move into our foundry. So we've been at it

0:13:54.880 --> 0:13:57.200
<v Speaker 7>now a couple of years, and we're starting to see

0:13:57.200 --> 0:14:00.600
<v Speaker 7>the results of those hard work and getting back to

0:14:00.679 --> 0:14:03.960
<v Speaker 7>competitive process technology with AT and A. So a very

0:14:04.000 --> 0:14:06.240
<v Speaker 7>good quarter of operational results.

0:14:07.200 --> 0:14:09.200
<v Speaker 3>Pat we have a question from our audience, and that

0:14:09.320 --> 0:14:12.680
<v Speaker 3>question comes from Clem DeLong, who's the CEO and founder

0:14:12.679 --> 0:14:15.320
<v Speaker 3>of Hugging Face, and he makes the point that on

0:14:15.360 --> 0:14:19.760
<v Speaker 3>his platform there are many more smaller models now available

0:14:20.120 --> 0:14:22.160
<v Speaker 3>and it's leading him to have a question for you

0:14:22.600 --> 0:14:26.720
<v Speaker 3>about Intel's place in the on device trend we're seeing

0:14:26.720 --> 0:14:29.320
<v Speaker 3>with AI and how you're going to enable more on

0:14:29.400 --> 0:14:30.560
<v Speaker 3>device AI use.

0:14:31.840 --> 0:14:34.840
<v Speaker 7>Well, thank you, Clem, A great question, and a Hugging

0:14:34.840 --> 0:14:37.320
<v Speaker 7>Face a great company, and you know, as you think

0:14:37.320 --> 0:14:39.800
<v Speaker 7>about these models, you know we do see it moving

0:14:39.800 --> 0:14:43.400
<v Speaker 7>from the training phase of you know, trillions of parameters

0:14:43.560 --> 0:14:46.760
<v Speaker 7>to the inferencing phase, and exactly like the questioner says,

0:14:46.840 --> 0:14:49.840
<v Speaker 7>in that inferencing phase, more of that will happen on

0:14:50.000 --> 0:14:53.240
<v Speaker 7>prem for data center customers, and many of those smaller

0:14:53.320 --> 0:14:57.400
<v Speaker 7>models will be retrained with enterprise's own data.

0:14:57.520 --> 0:14:58.280
<v Speaker 2>A lot of those.

0:14:58.120 --> 0:15:02.200
<v Speaker 7>Will just run on zeon need a special accelerator, or

0:15:02.200 --> 0:15:06.600
<v Speaker 7>it'll be zeon plus an accelerator, but also then the

0:15:06.760 --> 0:15:10.000
<v Speaker 7>edge use cases and AIPC use cases.

0:15:10.440 --> 0:15:10.520
<v Speaker 5>Ed.

0:15:10.640 --> 0:15:13.240
<v Speaker 7>I call it the three laws of the edge, right,

0:15:13.280 --> 0:15:14.920
<v Speaker 7>the laws of physics, right, the.

0:15:15.080 --> 0:15:15.680
<v Speaker 2>Speed of light.

0:15:15.720 --> 0:15:17.680
<v Speaker 7>If I have to go to the cloud, I had time.

0:15:18.000 --> 0:15:21.040
<v Speaker 7>Your second law is the law of economics, right, it's

0:15:21.120 --> 0:15:24.360
<v Speaker 7>cheaper to run on my device. And finally the laws

0:15:24.400 --> 0:15:27.680
<v Speaker 7>of the land. My data on my device in my

0:15:27.800 --> 0:15:30.400
<v Speaker 7>data center. So we see it moving from a cloud

0:15:30.520 --> 0:15:33.960
<v Speaker 7>training world to an edge and on prem world for

0:15:34.040 --> 0:15:35.160
<v Speaker 7>inferencing for the future.

0:15:36.600 --> 0:15:39.400
<v Speaker 3>I therefore have to ask you about GOUDI. Your AI

0:15:39.520 --> 0:15:42.160
<v Speaker 3>accelerator did not get the traction that you'd hoped and

0:15:42.200 --> 0:15:45.320
<v Speaker 3>you won't be making the outline target of five hundred

0:15:45.360 --> 0:15:48.520
<v Speaker 3>million dollars in sales for this fiscal year or calendar year.

0:15:49.040 --> 0:15:52.320
<v Speaker 3>Why is it a use case issue that the data

0:15:52.360 --> 0:15:55.160
<v Speaker 3>center operators aren't looking at it or something else.

0:15:56.320 --> 0:15:56.520
<v Speaker 2>Yeah.

0:15:56.600 --> 0:15:59.240
<v Speaker 7>Two factors that we pointed out. One is is that

0:15:59.320 --> 0:16:01.800
<v Speaker 7>now we have Gouty three coming out, so there's more

0:16:02.000 --> 0:16:06.160
<v Speaker 7>enthusiasm for the next generation product that we're just starting

0:16:06.200 --> 0:16:09.400
<v Speaker 7>to ramp now. The second one is the software and

0:16:09.560 --> 0:16:12.760
<v Speaker 7>the software use cases the AI world has moved very

0:16:12.880 --> 0:16:17.480
<v Speaker 7>rapidly and innovating very quickly, and the robustness and the

0:16:17.480 --> 0:16:20.960
<v Speaker 7>completeness of the Gouty software stack hasn't been as great.

0:16:21.360 --> 0:16:25.720
<v Speaker 7>And it's an accelerator, not a full reprogrammable GPU, so

0:16:25.760 --> 0:16:29.080
<v Speaker 7>that makes some of the software porting and optimizations a

0:16:29.080 --> 0:16:32.560
<v Speaker 7>bit more difficult. Obviously, as we get more of that

0:16:32.680 --> 0:16:36.960
<v Speaker 7>running on Goudy, we solve the software problems. But secondly

0:16:37.000 --> 0:16:40.560
<v Speaker 7>then it's also to move to a complete GPU capability,

0:16:40.680 --> 0:16:44.000
<v Speaker 7>which we'll be doing out in time, and that development

0:16:44.040 --> 0:16:46.160
<v Speaker 7>effort is also well underway, so we feel we have

0:16:46.200 --> 0:16:48.920
<v Speaker 7>a solid position. The world is coming to more on

0:16:49.040 --> 0:16:52.880
<v Speaker 7>prem and enterprise use cases. Like the last question ask

0:16:53.240 --> 0:16:57.160
<v Speaker 7>and Gouty three good early indications from the marketplace and

0:16:57.200 --> 0:16:59.080
<v Speaker 7>its success as we ramp it in twenty five.

0:17:00.080 --> 0:17:02.560
<v Speaker 3>If you're just joining us on Bloomberg Television and Radio,

0:17:02.680 --> 0:17:07.400
<v Speaker 3>we're live with the Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger. Pat Bloomberg's

0:17:07.400 --> 0:17:11.760
<v Speaker 3>reported that arm and Qualcom, two of your peers, are

0:17:11.760 --> 0:17:16.400
<v Speaker 3>interested in buying some or part of Intel. Can you

0:17:16.480 --> 0:17:19.520
<v Speaker 3>confirm whether or not you received a formal offer from

0:17:19.520 --> 0:17:22.960
<v Speaker 3>them or anyone else, and what Intel's consideration of them

0:17:22.960 --> 0:17:23.280
<v Speaker 3>would be.

0:17:24.720 --> 0:17:29.000
<v Speaker 7>Yeah, and Obviously, there's been rumors and churn in the industry,

0:17:29.240 --> 0:17:32.159
<v Speaker 7>and I think all of that just indicates how important

0:17:32.280 --> 0:17:37.400
<v Speaker 7>Intel is to the Intel into the industry structure and semiconductors,

0:17:37.400 --> 0:17:39.760
<v Speaker 7>and how important those supply chains are.

0:17:40.160 --> 0:17:40.680
<v Speaker 2>For the world.

0:17:41.160 --> 0:17:44.720
<v Speaker 7>We don't view any of these rumors as particularly emeritus.

0:17:44.760 --> 0:17:49.399
<v Speaker 7>We laid out a strategy, we reaffirmed that with our

0:17:49.440 --> 0:17:53.000
<v Speaker 7>board of directors, and obviously, as we've taken these steps

0:17:53.440 --> 0:17:56.600
<v Speaker 7>this quarter and restructuring and getting our costs where they

0:17:56.640 --> 0:17:59.520
<v Speaker 7>need to be, we have the capacity to go on

0:17:59.560 --> 0:18:04.400
<v Speaker 7>the journey that we've laid out to produce sustainable profitability

0:18:04.640 --> 0:18:08.360
<v Speaker 7>and result in shareholder return. So with that, I'm committed,

0:18:08.400 --> 0:18:10.679
<v Speaker 7>the team's committed, we have the board support for the

0:18:10.720 --> 0:18:13.720
<v Speaker 7>strategy that we've laid out, and Q three shows that's

0:18:13.760 --> 0:18:14.800
<v Speaker 7>exactly what we're going to do.

0:18:15.680 --> 0:18:19.120
<v Speaker 3>But I've been trying to help our audience understand Intel's

0:18:19.160 --> 0:18:22.280
<v Speaker 3>historic and current business right the products, but also foundry.

0:18:22.520 --> 0:18:24.840
<v Speaker 3>And what you said was that twenty twenty six is

0:18:24.880 --> 0:18:28.600
<v Speaker 3>when those third party customers start to show up. But

0:18:28.680 --> 0:18:31.640
<v Speaker 3>could you just outline the path to that what you

0:18:31.680 --> 0:18:34.840
<v Speaker 3>want to hold yourself to for next year in developing

0:18:34.880 --> 0:18:36.960
<v Speaker 3>that business as a sort of standalone unit.

0:18:38.200 --> 0:18:41.200
<v Speaker 7>Yeah, and it's a great question ed and clearly we've

0:18:41.280 --> 0:18:44.399
<v Speaker 7>started to see that already emerge. And even this quarter

0:18:44.480 --> 0:18:48.960
<v Speaker 7>we saw quarter and quarter growth of the external foundry business,

0:18:49.320 --> 0:18:51.600
<v Speaker 7>largely driven by some of those early.

0:18:51.320 --> 0:18:52.639
<v Speaker 2>Packaging design wins.

0:18:52.640 --> 0:18:55.919
<v Speaker 7>So these advanced packages are sort of a faster on ramp,

0:18:56.200 --> 0:19:00.399
<v Speaker 7>but ultimately it's becoming a wafer foundry for the d street.

0:19:00.560 --> 0:19:04.080
<v Speaker 7>And as we said, three major design wins this quarter,

0:19:04.320 --> 0:19:07.560
<v Speaker 7>you know, one with Amazon and two other compute use cases.

0:19:07.600 --> 0:19:10.000
<v Speaker 7>So we'll be updating you know, the market as we

0:19:10.040 --> 0:19:13.440
<v Speaker 7>win more of those customers and describing the lifetime deal

0:19:13.560 --> 0:19:16.679
<v Speaker 7>value of those to the marketplace as well. So we'll

0:19:16.720 --> 0:19:20.840
<v Speaker 7>give some of those breadcrumbs along the way. But it

0:19:20.920 --> 0:19:24.040
<v Speaker 7>takes a couple of years for people to move these designs,

0:19:24.080 --> 0:19:26.119
<v Speaker 7>a year to design it, a year to bring it

0:19:26.160 --> 0:19:30.160
<v Speaker 7>into production until it starts to ramp in the marketplace.

0:19:30.560 --> 0:19:33.640
<v Speaker 7>So key milestones for eighteen A that customers are now

0:19:33.680 --> 0:19:40.040
<v Speaker 7>beginning those design cycles, the design tools, the design libraries.

0:19:39.440 --> 0:19:42.440
<v Speaker 2>Are being moved over to eighteen A, but.

0:19:42.400 --> 0:19:45.520
<v Speaker 7>It really isn't until twenty six that those results start

0:19:45.560 --> 0:19:48.760
<v Speaker 7>to really help Intel's products. And then twenty six twenty

0:19:48.800 --> 0:19:52.320
<v Speaker 7>seven until we start to see meaningful volumes externally.

0:19:53.520 --> 0:19:56.320
<v Speaker 3>That way just days away from an election in this country,

0:19:56.760 --> 0:19:59.760
<v Speaker 3>and I'm particularly interested in your assessment and planning for

0:20:00.160 --> 0:20:02.960
<v Speaker 3>might happen to the Chips Act programs. Of course, I

0:20:03.000 --> 0:20:05.600
<v Speaker 3>don't expect you to know what will happen in the election.

0:20:06.320 --> 0:20:09.200
<v Speaker 3>You do not have a crystal ball. But former President

0:20:09.240 --> 0:20:13.520
<v Speaker 3>Trump has kind of made disparaging remarks about President Biden's

0:20:13.560 --> 0:20:15.679
<v Speaker 3>economic agenda. How are you planning for that?

0:20:15.760 --> 0:20:16.040
<v Speaker 1>Please?

0:20:17.359 --> 0:20:20.440
<v Speaker 7>Yeah, And I'd say maybe three different perspectives. Number One,

0:20:20.480 --> 0:20:23.600
<v Speaker 7>the Chips Act was a bipartisan act and with that

0:20:23.760 --> 0:20:27.320
<v Speaker 7>strong support from both sides of the aisle. And with that,

0:20:27.400 --> 0:20:31.440
<v Speaker 7>we believe the importance of that in terms of industrial policy.

0:20:31.480 --> 0:20:38.199
<v Speaker 7>The semiconductor industry is well supported by Congress and both parties. Second,

0:20:38.720 --> 0:20:42.399
<v Speaker 7>we are disappointed by how long and how slow the

0:20:42.800 --> 0:20:47.320
<v Speaker 7>dispensing of funds has been and well over two years

0:20:47.359 --> 0:20:50.359
<v Speaker 7>at this point. I've invested thirty billion in capital and

0:20:50.400 --> 0:20:53.680
<v Speaker 7>we've seen zero dollars of the Chips grants at this point.

0:20:53.920 --> 0:20:56.119
<v Speaker 7>So we do believe that that has been too slow,

0:20:56.160 --> 0:20:59.360
<v Speaker 7>and we're somewhat frustrated by that, and we've taken out

0:20:59.359 --> 0:21:02.680
<v Speaker 7>of our financials four this year. That said Yil, there's

0:21:02.680 --> 0:21:05.800
<v Speaker 7>also the Investment tax credit that we are seeing in

0:21:05.840 --> 0:21:08.320
<v Speaker 7>It is much larger than the grant portion of the

0:21:08.400 --> 0:21:11.640
<v Speaker 7>CHIPSAC and that is now law, and that will be beneficial.

0:21:11.880 --> 0:21:15.600
<v Speaker 7>But clearly, I think whoever wins the election, the importance

0:21:15.640 --> 0:21:18.920
<v Speaker 7>of this industry, the importance of rebuilding this supply chain

0:21:18.920 --> 0:21:23.399
<v Speaker 7>of manufacturing is well supported. And Intel as a designer,

0:21:23.760 --> 0:21:27.320
<v Speaker 7>R and D and manufacturer is unique in the United

0:21:27.359 --> 0:21:30.000
<v Speaker 7>States and in the overall structure of the industry. And

0:21:30.040 --> 0:21:34.679
<v Speaker 7>we expect the broad support rate of the administration regardless

0:21:34.760 --> 0:21:36.760
<v Speaker 7>which party wins as a result.

0:21:36.960 --> 0:21:38.320
<v Speaker 1>Thank you, Pat.

0:21:38.359 --> 0:21:41.520
<v Speaker 3>Two quarters ago your CFO told me you were two

0:21:41.560 --> 0:21:45.160
<v Speaker 3>over indexed to CPU, and we know what happened with Goudi.

0:21:45.800 --> 0:21:48.119
<v Speaker 3>You made painful decisions in the court to gone reduce

0:21:48.200 --> 0:21:52.000
<v Speaker 3>headcount by sixteen five hundred. Do you now have the

0:21:52.040 --> 0:21:55.800
<v Speaker 3>plan in place and are you confident from here?

0:21:57.359 --> 0:21:59.480
<v Speaker 7>You know, we laid out a clean sheet program that

0:21:59.520 --> 0:22:02.520
<v Speaker 7>we went through to really benchmark the business. We took

0:22:02.560 --> 0:22:06.440
<v Speaker 7>a conservative view of the funding plan, as we call

0:22:06.520 --> 0:22:09.600
<v Speaker 7>it internally, saying you know, we're taking a modest growth

0:22:09.640 --> 0:22:12.880
<v Speaker 7>outlook and we're building our cost structure to that very

0:22:13.320 --> 0:22:16.320
<v Speaker 7>modest outlook, but we've also built now a lot of

0:22:16.359 --> 0:22:18.960
<v Speaker 7>optionality to scale up into the business. We have a

0:22:19.000 --> 0:22:23.280
<v Speaker 7>shell ahead where we have capacity that we can scale

0:22:23.320 --> 0:22:28.840
<v Speaker 7>into if necessary, and we've made a smaller, more efficient

0:22:29.000 --> 0:22:33.399
<v Speaker 7>Nimbre company that is able to execute with more agility

0:22:33.480 --> 0:22:36.520
<v Speaker 7>and speed as well. So we feel like we're now

0:22:36.680 --> 0:22:39.720
<v Speaker 7>well set up for the future. This was a challenging

0:22:39.800 --> 0:22:42.879
<v Speaker 7>quarter for me for the company, but we feel like

0:22:42.920 --> 0:22:45.160
<v Speaker 7>we're well set up for the future. And the good

0:22:45.200 --> 0:22:49.440
<v Speaker 7>operational results that exceeded the markets expectations and the increased

0:22:49.440 --> 0:22:51.919
<v Speaker 7>guidance for Q four, we feel like we're now in

0:22:51.960 --> 0:22:53.040
<v Speaker 7>a very solid position.

0:22:54.359 --> 0:22:57.080
<v Speaker 3>Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger, thank you for joining us here

0:22:57.119 --> 0:22:59.679
<v Speaker 3>on this special bluebot technology straight from the analyst school.

0:23:00.000 --> 0:23:00.800
<v Speaker 1>Appreciate your time.

0:23:00.920 --> 0:23:04.680
<v Speaker 3>Thank you, ed like always, Okay, let's get more reactions

0:23:04.680 --> 0:23:07.040
<v Speaker 3>to that conversation the numbers and what is the big

0:23:07.080 --> 0:23:11.240
<v Speaker 3>earning story this Thursday Bloomberg Intelligence and this Congensabani who's

0:23:11.280 --> 0:23:14.880
<v Speaker 3>just posted his reaction on the Bloomberg terminal saying details

0:23:14.920 --> 0:23:18.200
<v Speaker 3>on two new eighteen eight customers will be key to

0:23:18.320 --> 0:23:21.600
<v Speaker 3>offset pains from the third quarter pains that We've just

0:23:21.640 --> 0:23:24.480
<v Speaker 3>been through extensively, Kunjan, But just go a bit deeper

0:23:24.520 --> 0:23:26.560
<v Speaker 3>into your thesis and your reaction to what Pat said.

0:23:26.960 --> 0:23:28.840
<v Speaker 8>Yeah, this is a name that I struggled with most

0:23:29.359 --> 0:23:31.440
<v Speaker 8>ed there were a lot of positives. If you want

0:23:31.440 --> 0:23:34.679
<v Speaker 8>to take a positive view, right, they came in slightly better.

0:23:35.119 --> 0:23:36.280
<v Speaker 1>You have to if you want to.

0:23:36.600 --> 0:23:39.479
<v Speaker 8>But to be fair, they came in slightly better than

0:23:39.600 --> 0:23:42.760
<v Speaker 8>feared on most top line Q three, Q four, the

0:23:42.760 --> 0:23:44.960
<v Speaker 8>free cash flow target is moving in the right direction.

0:23:45.080 --> 0:23:48.840
<v Speaker 8>The gross to netcapax, the ratio is improving. But at

0:23:48.840 --> 0:23:51.359
<v Speaker 8>the same time, we thought the gross margin floor was

0:23:51.400 --> 0:23:54.080
<v Speaker 8>sort of something they already said last quarter. Right, so

0:23:54.160 --> 0:23:57.560
<v Speaker 8>we have this massive significant impairment charges. Yes, you can

0:23:57.600 --> 0:23:59.680
<v Speaker 8>ignore that, and the gross margin was better than a

0:24:00.080 --> 0:24:02.800
<v Speaker 8>bit of there, but you have to make sure, right,

0:24:02.840 --> 0:24:05.359
<v Speaker 8>how many times are we going to draw this clean

0:24:05.359 --> 0:24:06.080
<v Speaker 8>sheet and go on?

0:24:06.160 --> 0:24:09.959
<v Speaker 3>From their AI accelerators, the chip that everyone talks about,

0:24:10.080 --> 0:24:12.879
<v Speaker 3>Goudie's not getting traction. They won't make five hundred million

0:24:12.880 --> 0:24:16.000
<v Speaker 3>dollars in sales this year. What was your reaction to that.

0:24:16.000 --> 0:24:18.360
<v Speaker 8>That's part of sort of the negatives out of today, right,

0:24:18.520 --> 0:24:21.040
<v Speaker 8>the AI story doesn't seem to get any better In fact,

0:24:21.040 --> 0:24:23.440
<v Speaker 8>this announcement makes it sort of slow down even more.

0:24:24.080 --> 0:24:27.399
<v Speaker 8>Based on the implied guide of for DCAI, it seems

0:24:27.480 --> 0:24:30.080
<v Speaker 8>that the share loss have not stopped. And on the

0:24:30.160 --> 0:24:33.480
<v Speaker 8>other hand, you have the competitor AMD suggesting strong turing

0:24:33.600 --> 0:24:36.480
<v Speaker 8>ramp next quarter, right versus a flatish guide from Intel.

0:24:36.520 --> 0:24:39.560
<v Speaker 8>So that tells me both in CCG and Data Center

0:24:39.880 --> 0:24:41.680
<v Speaker 8>that the share loss have not stopped yet.

0:24:42.080 --> 0:24:45.600
<v Speaker 3>Bloomberg Intelligence analyst can Jensavanni, we just talked about his research,

0:24:45.680 --> 0:24:46.680
<v Speaker 3>but check it out on.

0:24:46.640 --> 0:24:47.720
<v Speaker 1>The Bloomberg terminal.

0:24:48.240 --> 0:24:50.480
<v Speaker 3>I want to get the final word with Bloomberg Senior

0:24:50.520 --> 0:24:54.080
<v Speaker 3>executive editor Tom Giles, who has led this news rem

0:24:54.359 --> 0:24:55.240
<v Speaker 3>for a long time.

0:24:55.800 --> 0:24:57.440
<v Speaker 1>Interesting interview.

0:24:57.640 --> 0:24:59.800
<v Speaker 3>I think, you know Pat Gelsia coming clean on how

0:25:00.240 --> 0:25:02.800
<v Speaker 3>it is, but he still projects confidence.

0:25:06.440 --> 0:25:07.159
<v Speaker 1>I just watch you.

0:25:07.800 --> 0:25:11.680
<v Speaker 4>My overall takeaway from that conversation with Pat was he's

0:25:11.720 --> 0:25:15.280
<v Speaker 4>really trying to accentuate the positive. He acknowledged it's difficult

0:25:15.320 --> 0:25:18.280
<v Speaker 4>to cut sixteen five hundred jobs. They made some really

0:25:18.320 --> 0:25:23.280
<v Speaker 4>hard decisions in the quarter. At the same time, he's

0:25:23.359 --> 0:25:26.160
<v Speaker 4>being as honest as he could about the AI outlook.

0:25:26.520 --> 0:25:29.080
<v Speaker 4>You need to have if you're a ship maker right now,

0:25:29.400 --> 0:25:32.560
<v Speaker 4>you need to be able to sell an AI story

0:25:32.800 --> 0:25:35.240
<v Speaker 4>and Intel is just not doing that right now.

0:25:37.080 --> 0:25:40.119
<v Speaker 3>Ian King has been sending the headlines we're reporting on

0:25:40.160 --> 0:25:44.199
<v Speaker 3>the terminal right that this is difficult, but they demonstrated progress.

0:25:44.200 --> 0:25:46.560
<v Speaker 3>Bloomberg's Tom Giles, who leads the news room here at

0:25:46.560 --> 0:25:50.240
<v Speaker 3>Bloomberg Technology, thank you very much. This was part of

0:25:50.240 --> 0:25:53.560
<v Speaker 3>a mega earnings period. Right when it comes to the megacaps,

0:25:53.600 --> 0:25:54.720
<v Speaker 3>Intel's still the story.

0:25:55.080 --> 0:25:56.640
<v Speaker 1>It's up eight percentage points.

0:25:56.920 --> 0:26:00.000
<v Speaker 3>Apple, the world's most valuable company in Amazon also reports.

0:26:00.600 --> 0:26:01.520
<v Speaker 1>But the movements in.

0:26:01.520 --> 0:26:05.480
<v Speaker 3>There after hours stock was a little bit more muted

0:26:05.680 --> 0:26:09.920
<v Speaker 3>and a difficult one. Intel up eight percent. It's an

0:26:09.920 --> 0:26:10.720
<v Speaker 3>interesting one.

0:26:10.800 --> 0:26:11.000
<v Speaker 2>You know.

0:26:11.119 --> 0:26:13.960
<v Speaker 3>I don't know whether or not investors will stay with

0:26:14.000 --> 0:26:16.439
<v Speaker 3>the momentum in the stock. If they believe it, they

0:26:16.480 --> 0:26:19.720
<v Speaker 3>will have to. I guess Tom Giles digest what Pat

0:26:19.880 --> 0:26:20.840
<v Speaker 3>Gelsinger told us.

0:26:21.720 --> 0:26:24.800
<v Speaker 4>Yeah, absolutely. I mean it's surged a lot, it's come

0:26:24.840 --> 0:26:27.560
<v Speaker 4>back a little bit. I think as the market as

0:26:28.040 --> 0:26:30.840
<v Speaker 4>the reality sinks in that they've got a tough row

0:26:31.080 --> 0:26:35.639
<v Speaker 4>to hold ahead. And it's just it's there was not

0:26:36.000 --> 0:26:40.160
<v Speaker 4>enough in this story to say that Intel is in

0:26:40.200 --> 0:26:43.320
<v Speaker 4>the clear, and I thought Pat was upfront about that

0:26:43.400 --> 0:26:45.560
<v Speaker 4>as much as he really tried to accentuate how good

0:26:45.560 --> 0:26:46.160
<v Speaker 4>things are going.

0:26:46.240 --> 0:26:46.560
<v Speaker 1>Got it.

0:26:47.800 --> 0:26:51.639
<v Speaker 3>Bloombg's Tom Giles again, Senior executive editor for Bloomberg Technology.

0:26:51.680 --> 0:26:52.359
<v Speaker 1>We appreciate it.

0:26:52.400 --> 0:26:56.200
<v Speaker 3>That does it for this edition, special edition of bloombate Anology.

0:26:56.240 --> 0:26:59.680
<v Speaker 3>We'll be back tomorrow morning and we'll review the entire thing.

0:27:00.080 --> 0:27:00.879
<v Speaker 1>This is Bloomberg