Intel stock jumped nearly 6% in pre-market trading on Wednesday, hitting $114.27, as CEO Lip-Bu Tan took the stage at Computex 2026 in Taipei to lay out the company’s AI chip roadmap.
The move came one day after Intel fell sharply when Nvidia unveiled its competing Vera CPU and RTX Spark laptop chip at the same event, pressuring both Intel and AMD.
Wednesday’s bounce was a sharp reversal from that pressure.
At Computex, Intel officially launched the Xeon 6 Plus processor. Built on the company’s 18A process node, it features up to 288 E-cores and is aimed squarely at high-density AI inference and agentic workloads in data centers.
Intel is betting this new CPU cycle, driven by agentic AI demand, will be a meaningful growth catalyst. Tan put it bluntly: “In the last four weeks, I have had all CEOs calling me, saying: ‘I need more CPU.'”
The product launch brought Wall Street along with it. Mizuho raised its price target to $128 from $124. Wells Fargo lifted its target to $110 from $85. Barclays moved from $65 all the way to $100.
All three maintained their existing ratings — Neutral, Equal-Weight, and Equal-Weight respectively — but the target increases reflect improved confidence in Intel’s AI infrastructure story.
Despite the upgrades, the analyst consensus remains a Hold, with an average price target of $80.31, well below where the stock is currently trading.
Intel also announced rackscale AI infrastructure partnerships with SambaNova and Foxconn. A new enterprise inference cloud called Vector Core Compute, backed by Vista Equity Partners and Cambium Capital, revealed a platform running on Intel Xeon chips alongside SambaNova RDUs and Nvidia GPUs, with Together.ai as its first customer.
Tan used his Computex appearance to shape the competitive narrative around Intel. He called Taiwan Semiconductor a “very trusted partnership,” saying Intel will continue to rely on the foundry for advanced chip production.
He also described Nvidia as “a good friend,” positioning Intel less as a combatant and more as a collaborator in the AI infrastructure buildout.
The stock has surged roughly 432% over the past 12 months. Intel’s 50-day moving average remains above its 200-day moving average, and the golden cross that formed in August 2025 is still intact.
Key resistance sits near $133, close to the 52-week high of $132.75. Support is being watched around $102.50.
The broader market provided little lift on Wednesday — the S&P 500 edged up 0.1%, the Dow gained 0.5%, and the Nasdaq was essentially flat — making Intel’s move clearly stock-specific.
The next major event on the calendar is Intel’s earnings report on July 23, 2026. Wall Street expects EPS of $0.19, compared to a loss of $0.10 a year ago. Revenue is projected at $14.4 billion, up from $12.86 billion in the prior-year period.
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