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Intel Outlook Stokes Concern Server Gold Mine Has Lost Shine

Intel’s CEO Bob Swan is struggling to prolong a run of record earnings and fend off burgeoning semiconductor-industry competition.

Intel Outlook Stokes Concern Server Gold Mine Has Lost Shine
A large interactive computer display stands at the reception entrance during a tour of an Intel Corp. research and development facility in Bengaluru, India. (Photographer: Samyukta Lakshmi/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Intel Corp., which had been the biggest beneficiary of a years-long, multibillion-dollar spending spree by the cloud-computing industry, signaled an end to an expansion that drove record revenue and profit.

The world’s second-largest semiconductor maker late Thursday predicted its data-center group, which provides the chips that are at the heart of almost all server computers, will post a revenue decline in 2019, its first drop in a decade. Intel also cut its overall annual sales and earnings targets and said this quarter will be worse than analysts estimated, sending shares tumbling in extended trading.

Intel shares fell almost 8 percent in pre-market trading on Friday. The stock had earlier slipped 1.9 percent to $57.61 at the close in New York, leaving it up 23 percent this year. That performance trails the benchmark Philadelphia Stock Exchange Semiconductor Index’s 35 percent advance. AMD will report its quarterly numbers on April 30.

Asian semiconductor-related shares also fell on Friday after Intel reported, undermining confidence in demand for computer processors. In South Korea Samsung Electronics fell 1.3 percent, and SK Hynix dropped 2.6 percent.

Chief Executive Officer Bob Swan can no longer rely on the business unit that had carried the company to a run of earnings growth even as the PC market wobbled. While admitting that the outlook has deteriorated from earlier projections, Swan said Intel’s customers, particularly those in China, are merely tapping the brakes after ordering chips at a frantic pace last year. Analysts said that’s not the whole story, and the downbeat forecast added to concerns that Intel may lose its lucrative stranglehold on the market for computer processors.

“They’re undoubtedly losing share,’’ said Stacy Rasgon, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein. The company urgently needs to solve recent manufacturing problems to head off possible gains by rival Advanced Micro Devices Inc., he said. “The overhang is still there. Is AMD going to take meaningful share?’’

Intel’s overall sales in the first quarter were little changed at $16.1 billion. Analysts on average had predicted $16.03 billion in revenue. Net income slipped to $3.97 billion, or 87 cents a share, while analysts had projected 82 cents. In last year’s first quarter, Intel posted earnings of $4.45 billion, or 93 cents. Gross margin, or the percentage of sales remaining after deducting the cost of production, was 56.6 percent in the quarter. Intel’s target range for that key indicator of efficiency for a manufacturing company is above 60 percent.

Revenue in the current period will be about $15.6 billion and net income will be 83 cents a share, the Santa Clara, California-based company said in a statement. That compares with average analysts’ estimates of $16.9 billion and 96 cents a share, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Sales for the year will be $69 billion, Intel said, below analyst projections of $71.3 billion.

Swan said Intel is dealing with the hangover of "explosive growth" in 2018 and customers are working through their stockpiles of unused parts.

"Last year we had outstanding growth and we were expecting a slowing in data center," he said in an interview after the report. "It’s going to take a little longer than we anticipated." Swan also said that the steeper-than-expected drop in orders for some of his business had been more pronounced in China, where the company gets about a quarter of its annual revenue. "China headwinds have increased."

The data-center unit declined 6.3 percent from a year earlier in the recent period, compared with growth of 9 percent in the fourth quarter. In January, Intel executives predicted that orders would pick up once customers worked through stockpiles of unused chips. Intel’s Xeon processors account for more than 95 percent of the market for chips that run servers, the machines that provide the backbone of the internet and corporate networks.

Cloud-computing companies such as Amazon.com Inc., which reported strong earnings Thursday, have ordered massive amounts of equipment to meet the insatiable demand for data processing. Such spending has been one of the key drivers of growth in the chip industry over the past few years. With its cautious outlook, Intel joined other chipmakers, such as Xilinx Inc. and Texas Instruments Inc., in signaling that massive spending on infrastructure isn’t going to come raging back this year.

Intel Outlook Stokes Concern Server Gold Mine Has Lost Shine

Intel’s first-quarter challenges weren’t confined to server chips. In memory, the company’s investments in a new type of semiconductor weren’t able to provide a cushion from a decline in the price of industry-standard parts it makes. Operating losses in that business widened to $297 million in the quarter, compared with a loss of $81 million in the same period a year earlier. Swan said the unit will have to do a better job of providing a return on investments, adding that he would look at options including partnerships with other companies.

Intel also announced earlier this month that it will wind down a multibillion-dollar, decades-long effort to stake a claim in chips for the mobile-phone industry. After Intel’s one significant customer, Apple Inc., said it will return to using Qualcomm Inc. for its iPhones, Intel said it will stop developing chips for 5G smartphones and will complete an assessment of the opportunities for modems in personal computers and other devices.

Though the server market is more profitable, Intel still gets the majority of its revenue from the PC market, and its processors are the main component in most of the world’s laptops and desktops. That business posted first-quarter sales of $8.59 billion, up 4.5 percent from a year earlier. Shortages of some parts, caused by manufacturing issues at Intel’s plants, have limited shipments of PCs in recent quarters. Swan said those shortages will continue through the first half of the year.

The company has been struggling to shift its factory network to more advanced techniques. That’s left Intel and the computer industry short of manufacturing capacity. In response, the company prioritized making chips that it can charge more for -- server and high-end desktop processors -- causing a scarcity of supply, particularly for cheaper laptops.

Intel initially sparked concern last year that it may be losing its edge in manufacturing when the company confirmed that it wouldn’t mass-produce semiconductors made with 10-nanometer technology until later this year. That may put it behind chipmaking rivals such as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.

To contact the reporter on this story: Ian King in San Francisco at ianking@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jillian Ward at jward56@bloomberg.net, Andrew Pollack

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