Poor Intel. Last year was pretty rough for the 55-year-old semiconductor firm, as it accrued just $54.2 billion in revenue, 14% less than the year before. After paying all its bills for manufacturing, research and development, and biscuits, there was just $1.7 billion left over in net income. Poor Intel.
So when the US administration announced the CHIPS and Science Act in 2022, with a total of $280 billion up for grabs, Intel jumped right in to get some of that golden booty. Only now it's asking for a further $10 billion, at the very least, to ensure Intel's US developments can continue.
This news of Intel's re-enactment of Oliver Twist (via Wccftech) isn't in the least bit surprising and not because of the company's recent financial results. Cutting-edge semiconductor manufacturing plants are extremely expensive to design, build, or even just refurbish. For example, Intel's Fab 9 plant recently opened in New Mexico, as part of the $3.5 billion investment plan in that region.
One aspect of the new plant is its ability to handle Intel's Foveros packaging technology, that's used to bond multiple chiplets (or tiles, as Intel calls them) onto the same piece of silicon. The Core Ultra range of laptop processors was the first to sport the latest version of this tech in a consumer-grade piece of hardware, and the forthcoming Arrow Lake and Lunar Lake designs will use it, too.
Hence why it's understandable Intel would go back to the US administration to wrangle a bigger slice of the CHIPS Act funding pot and an extra $10 billion would certainly help keep more of Intel's chip manufacturing in the US.
It's also tiny in comparison to the amount of money some companies have been requesting. For example, SoftBank (tech investment firm and owner of Arm) is trying to get $100 billion to create a startup that can beat Nvidia in the AI game, and OpenAI founder Sam Altman has suggested that it will take trillions of dollars to reshape the semiconductor industry into something that's
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