Key Takeaways
- Intel shares have climbed 69% year-to-date in 2026 and surged over 300% in the trailing 12-month period.
- The chipmaker recorded its strongest weekly percentage jump in more than two decades following major partnership reveals.
- The company has become part of Tesla and SpaceX’s Terafab semiconductor initiative while expanding its AI partnership with Google over multiple years.
- Benchmark Research upgraded its price objective to $76, highlighting robust CPU performance and promising 18A production capabilities.
- Northland Securities pushed its target to $92, emphasizing Intel’s critical role as one of only three advanced logic chipmakers worldwide.
Intel has staged a remarkable comeback. The chip giant’s shares have climbed 69% so far in 2026 and have more than tripled during the last year — a turnaround that has surprised many who watched the company struggle against competitors for years.
The previous week marked Intel’s strongest weekly percentage advance since the turn of the millennium, based on data from Dow Jones Market Data. Such performance demands attention.
The surge followed a series of high-profile announcements released in rapid succession. The company revealed its participation in Tesla and SpaceX’s Terafab semiconductor manufacturing project, expanded its multi-year Google partnership focused on AI-optimized processors, and announced the repurchase of complete ownership of its Irish fabrication facility.
Individually, any of these developments would have impacted share price. Combined, they fundamentally altered investor perception of Intel’s trajectory.
Wall Street Raises Expectations
Benchmark Research’s Cody Acree increased his Intel price objective from $57 to $76 while maintaining his Buy recommendation. He attributed the revision to “a more constructive view of Intel’s medium-term earnings power” amid growing confidence in the sustainability of its processor business.
Acree highlighted the Google agreement as validation of Intel’s role in artificial intelligence development. The Tesla collaboration, though details remain limited, suggests Intel’s foundry operations could attract additional external clients.
Benchmark’s central argument: focus on the longer horizon. Intel’s 18A node — representing its cutting-edge manufacturing technology — has already entered meaningful volume production, Acree observed, and external partners appear increasingly confident in the company’s ability to deliver.
Northland Securities took a more aggressive stance. Analyst Gus Richard lifted his target from $54 to $92 while keeping an Outperform rating. His reasoning centers on Intel’s strategic importance as one of merely three remaining advanced logic semiconductor manufacturers globally.
Geopolitical Considerations and Supply Chain Security
Richard emphasized a factor extending beyond financial metrics. Given Taiwan’s vulnerability to possible integration with mainland China, access to TSMC — the dominant global chip producer — could face disruption. This reality elevates the strategic value of Intel’s U.S.-based manufacturing infrastructure.
Intel’s agreements with federal agencies, Nvidia, Tesla, and Google all underscore this advantage, according to Richard.
Despite the remarkable rally, uncertainties persist. Intel currently commands a forward price-to-earnings multiple near 94 times — substantially above Nvidia’s approximately 21 times ratio. The valuation implies substantial future earnings expansion that hasn’t yet materialized.
A $5 billion Nvidia investment sparked speculation about a significant foundry contract, though no formal agreement has been disclosed. Benchmark’s Acree suggested that Intel’s Terafab participation may enhance its prospects of securing a major manufacturing customer.
Intel was changing hands at $62.09 during premarket trading Monday, showing modest decline from the prior session, though substantially above its year-opening level.
