Broadcom, TSMC eye deals that would split storied chipmaker Intel: report
Intel rivals Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and Broadcom are each eyeing potential deals that would break the US chipmaking icon in two, the Wall Street Journal reported Saturday, citing people familiar with the matter.
Broadcom has been closely examining Intelâs chip design and marketing business, the Journal reported, adding that the company had discussed a potential bid with its advisers but would likely only proceed if it found a partner for Intelâs manufacturing business.
TSMC, the worldâs biggest contract chipmaker, has separately studied controlling some or all of Intelâs chip plants, potentially as part of an investor consortium or other structure, the report said.
Broadcom and TSMC are not working together, and all of the talks so far are preliminary and largely informal, the Journal added.
Intelâs interim executive chairman, Frank Yeary, has been leading the discussions with possible suitors and Trump administration officials, who are concerned about the fate of a company seen as critical to national security, the report said.
Yeary has been telling individuals close to him that he is most focused on maximizing value for Intel shareholders, the report added.
Intel, Broadcom, TSMC and the White House did not immediately respond to Reutersâ requests for comment.
A White House official told Reuters on Friday that President Trumpâs administration might not support Intelâs US chip factories being operated by a foreign entity after Bloomberg reported that TSMC was considering taking a controlling stake in Intelâs factories at Trumpâs request.
The White House official said the Trump administration supported foreign companies investing and building in the US but was âunlikelyâ to support a foreign firm operating Intelâs factories.
Bloomberg reported that Trumpâs team raised the idea of a deal between the two firms in recent meetings with officials from TSMC who were receptive, citing a person familiar with the matter.
Intel was among the largest beneficiaries of the US push to onshore critical chip manufacturing led by the Biden administration.
The US Commerce Department said in November it was finalizing a $7.86 billion government subsidy for Intel. The company is one of a few chipmakers that design and manufacture semiconductors.
TSMC boasts a market valuation about eight times larger than that of Intel. The Taiwanese companyâs customers include AI chip leader Nvidia and AMD, which is Intelâs fierce rival in PC and server markets.
Former Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger, who was ousted last year, set sky-high expectations for Intelâs manufacturing and AI capabilities among major clients but fell short, leading to the chipmaker losing or canceling contracts, Reuters reported previously.
Intelâs shares lost about 60% of their value last year as its capital-intensive bid to bolster manufacturing â a strategy championed by Gelsinger â strained the companyâs cash flow and ultimately led to it cutting about 15% of its workforce
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