INTC Analysis: Intel's 158% Rally From 52-Week Lows Masks a Foundry Cash Burn of $4.9 Billion — Can New Leadership Close the Gap?
Intel Corporation (INTC) has staged one of the most dramatic comebacks in semiconductor history. The stock has surged 158% from its $17.67 fifty-two-week low to $45.61, fueled by CHIPS Act subsidies, a revived foundry narrative, and the broader AI infrastructure buildout. The market capitalization has climbed back to $228 billion — a remarkable recovery for a company that was written off by many as a permanent also-ran just twelve months ago. But the headline rally conceals a turbulent financial reality. FY2025 generated just $26 million in net income — barely above breakeven — on $52.9 billion in revenue. Free cash flow was negative $4.9 billion as Intel burned through $14.6 billion in capital expenditure to build out its foundry capacity. And a key leadership departure — Kevin O'Buckley, who had been steering the foundry push — has come at the worst possible time, just as Intel needs to convert its massive capital investments into customer wins. This analysis examines whether Intel's turnaround has genuine substance or whether the stock has gotten ahead of its fundamentals.