Intel blinked, the wafers ran out, and now the company is scrambling to keep hyperscalers happy without totally ghosting the PC market.
What just went down
What just went down
- So yeah, Intel dropped its Q4 2025 earnings, and nobody is ignoring the supply mess
- The real drama is the wafer shortages, and which customers get left hanging
- This is less about bad demand and more about Intel being caught flat-footed
- Turns out CPUs are suddenly hot again thanks to AI upgrades
- Hyperscalers are ripping out old x86 gear and rebuilding fast
- According to David Zinsner, Intel straight-up guessed wrong on how big this wave would be
- Core counts were expected to climb, but unit demand exploded instead
- Intel is now rushing headfirst into data center mode
- Intel admits it cannot fulfill every existing commitment
- The wafer shortage is the bottleneck, not a lack of buyers
- Production simply cannot stretch far enough right now
- The company is juggling client and data center demand without dropping either entirely
- Intel says it has extra capacity on the client side
- That capacity is being redirected to data center customers
- Low-end PCs are not the priority anymore
- Mid- and high-end client parts survive, everything else waits
- Expect market share shifts because of this shuffle
- Some Intel server CPUs rely on both internal and external foundries
- That hybrid approach is now a liability under supply pressure
- Securing enough wafers has turned into a serious headache
- AI demand exposed just how fragile this setup is
- CEO Lip-Bu Tan did not sugarcoat it
- Inventory was burned in Q4 to satisfy consumer demand
- Manufacturing yields are below expectations
- Production volumes are not where leadership wants them
- The takeaway is simple: execution has to get better
- Focus on platforms like Panther Lake soaked up capacity
- Capital and production lines went heavily toward client products
- That choice left data center opportunities on the table
- In hindsight, Intel wishes it had balanced that bet better
- Q4 earnings landed with a thud across the industry
- Intel could not balance client and AI revenue streams
- Shareholders are again pushing for an AI-first strategy
- The pressure to go all-in on the data center keeps building
- Data center demand is still climbing fast
- Intel sees a real opportunity if supply improves
- The big question is how long the PC market can stay sidelined
- Intel now has to fix execution before patience runs out