Intel's leadership faces internal division as CEO Lip-Bu Tan clashes with Chairman Frank Yeary over manufacturing strategy. Yeary advocates spinning off the chip production division due to substantial financial losses. Tan opposes this approach, arguing that domestic manufacturing capabilities remain essential for American semiconductor independence. President Trump recently called for Tan's resignation because of his previous investments in Chinese companies.
The CEO previously led Cadence Design Systems, which recently admitted guilt for supplying restricted chip design software to China. Intel carries fifty billion dollars in debt against forty-three billion in current assets. Tan's planned capital fundraising effort has been delayed until 2026 despite urgent balance sheet needs.
Recent earnings results triggered an eight percent stock decline as investors questioned the company's recovery prospects. Tan criticized previous capacity investments as excessive and poorly planned. Intel shares have dropped 2.2 percent this year and fell 12.6 percent following the earnings announcement.
The CEO previously led Cadence Design Systems, which recently admitted guilt for supplying restricted chip design software to China. Intel carries fifty billion dollars in debt against forty-three billion in current assets. Tan's planned capital fundraising effort has been delayed until 2026 despite urgent balance sheet needs.
Recent earnings results triggered an eight percent stock decline as investors questioned the company's recovery prospects. Tan criticized previous capacity investments as excessive and poorly planned. Intel shares have dropped 2.2 percent this year and fell 12.6 percent following the earnings announcement.