Disclosing new financials details for its foundry unit on late Tuesday, Intel said the business posted operating losses of $7 billion in 2023 compared with $5.2 billion in 2022.
“We expected foundry economics to be bad, and they truly are,” said Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon. “We likely have several years of substantial headwinds still in front of us.”
Intel is set to lose more than $12 billion in market value if the losses hold.
The company has been spending billions of dollars to return as the dominant maker of cutting-edge chips, a position that it lost to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., which is now the world’s biggest contract chipmaker.
The U.S. chipmaker’s capital investments classified as “construction in progress” totaled $43.4 billion as of Dec. 30, 2023, compared with $36.7 billion a year earlier. Intel also plans to spend $100 billion on plants across four states in the United States, in part helped by funding from the U.S. Chips Act. CEO Pat Gelsinger said operating losses for its contract chip-making business would peak in 2024 before breaking even by about 2027. It accounted for about 35% of Intel’s total net revenue in 2023.
Intel expects the foundry business to have a gross margin of about 40% by 2030, which would still trail the 53% margin TSMC reported for the fourth quarter of 2023.
At T$625.5 billion ($19.52 billion) in just the final three months of the 2023, TSMC’s revenue is also much larger than the $18.9 billion in sales Intel’s foundry unit had in 2023.
“The incumbents’ geographic and talent advantages, as well as their established rolodex of tier-1 customers, have jolted investor confidence in Intel’s foundry prospects,” said Parv Sharma, a senior analyst at research firm Counterpoint.