Hock Tan, CEO of Broadcom (L) and former CEO of Intel, Pat Gelsinger.
Reuters | CNBC
It was a giant yr for silicon in Silicon Valley — however a brutal one for the corporate most liable for the realm’s moniker.
Intel, the 56-year-old chipmaker co-founded by trade pioneers Gordon Moore and Robert Noyce and legendary investor Arthur Rock, had its worst yr since going public in 1971, dropping 61% of its worth.
The alternative story unfolded at Broadcom, the chip conglomerate run by CEO Hock Tan and headquartered in Palo Alto, California, about 15 miles from Intel’s Santa Clara campus.
Broadcom’s inventory value soared 111% in 2024 as of Monday’s shut, its greatest efficiency ever. The present firm is the product of a 2015 acquisition by Avago, which went public in 2009.
The driving power behind the diverging narratives was synthetic intelligence. Broadcom rode the AI prepare, whereas Intel largely missed it. The altering fortunes of the 2 chipmakers underscores the fleeting nature of management within the tech trade and the way a number of key selections may end up in lots of of billions — and even trillions — of {dollars} in market cap shifts.
Broadcom develops customized chips for Google and different large cloud corporations. It additionally makes important networking gear that enormous server clusters have to tie 1000’s of AI chips collectively. Inside AI, Broadcom has largely been overshadowed by Nvidia, whose graphics processing items, or GPUs, energy a lot of the giant language fashions being developed at OpenAI, Microsoft, Google and Amazon and likewise allow the heftiest AI workloads.
Regardless of having a decrease profile, Broadcom’s accelerator chips, which the corporate calls XPUs, have grow to be a key piece of the AI ecosystem.
“Why it is actually capturing up is as a result of they’re speaking about AI, AI, AI, AI,” Eric Ross, chief funding strategist at Cascend, informed CNBC’s “Squawk Field” earlier this month.
Intel, which for many years was the dominant U.S. chipmaker, has been largely shut out of AI. Its server chips lag far behind Nvidia’s, and the corporate has additionally misplaced market share to longtime rival Superior Micro Units whereas spending closely on new factories.
Intel’s board ousted Pat Gelsinger from the CEO position on Dec. 1, after a tumultuous four-year tenure.
“I feel somebody extra revolutionary might need seen the AI wave coming,” Paul Argenti, professor of administration at Dartmouth’s Tuck College of Enterprise, stated in an interview on “Squawk Field” after the announcement.
An Intel spokesperson declined to remark.
Broadcom is now price about $1.1 trillion and is the eighth U.S. tech firm to cross the trillion-dollar mark. It is the second most beneficial chip firm, behind Nvidia, which has pushed the AI growth to a $3.4 trillion valuation, trailing solely Apple amongst all public corporations. Nvidia’s inventory value soared 178% this yr, however really did higher in 2023, when it gained 239%.
Till 4 years in the past, Intel was the world’s most beneficial chipmaker, nearing a $300 billion market cap in early 2020. The corporate is now price about $85 billion, simply bought booted off the Dow Jones Industrial Common — changed by Nvidia — and has been in talks to unload core components of its enterprise. Intel now ranks fifteenth in market cap amongst semiconductor corporations globally.
‘Not meant for everyone’
Following the Avago-Broadcom merger in 2015, the mixed firm’s greatest enterprise was chips for TV set-top packing containers and broadband routers. Broadcom nonetheless makes Wi-Fi chips utilized in laptops in addition to the iPhone and different smartphones.
After a failed bid to purchase cellular chip big Qualcomm in 2018, Broadcom turned its consideration to software program corporations. The capstone of its spending spree got here in 2022 with the introduced acquisition of server virtualization software program vendor VMware for $61 billion. Software program accounted for 41% of Broadcom’s $14 billion in income in the latest quarter, thanks partially to VMware.
What’s thrilling Wall Avenue is Broadcom’s position working with cloud suppliers to construct customized chips for AI. The corporate’s XPUs are usually easier and cheaper to function than Nvidia’s GPUs, and so they’re designed to run particular AI applications effectively.

Cloud distributors and different giant web corporations are spending billions of {dollars} a yr on Nvidia’s GPUs to allow them to construct their very own fashions and run AI workloads for purchasers. Broadcom’s success with customized chips is organising an AI spending showdown with Nvidia, as hyperscale cloud corporations look to distinguish their services and products from their rivals.
Broadcom’s chips aren’t for everybody, as solely a handful of corporations can afford to design and construct their very own customized processors.
“You need to be a Google, you must be a Meta, you must be a Microsoft or an Oracle to have the ability to use these chips,” Piper Sandler analyst Harsh Kumar informed CNBC’s “Squawk on the Avenue” on Dec. 13, a day after Broadcom’s earnings. “These chips usually are not meant for everyone.”
Whereas 2024 has been a breakout yr for Broadcom — AI income elevated 220% — the month of December has put it in report territory. The inventory is up 45% for the month as of Monday’s shut, 16 proportion factors higher than its prior greatest month.
On the corporate’s earnings name on Dec. 12, Tan informed buyers that Broadcom had doubled shipments of its XPUs to its three hyperscale suppliers. Essentially the most well-known of the bunch is Google, which counts on the know-how for its Tensor Processing Models, or TPUs, used to coach Apple’s AI software program launched this yr. The opposite two prospects, in keeping with analysts, are TikTok mum or dad ByteDance and Meta.
Tan stated that inside about two years, corporations might spend between $60 billion and $90 billion on XPUs.
“In 2027, we imagine every of them plans to deploy 1 million XPU clusters throughout a single material,” Tan stated of the three hyperscale prospects.
Along with AI chips, AI server clusters want highly effective networking components to coach probably the most superior fashions. Networking chips for AI accounted for 76% of Broadcom’s $4.5 billion of networking gross sales within the fourth quarter.
Broadcom stated that, in whole, about 40% of its $30.1 billion in 2024 semiconductor gross sales have been associated to AI, and that AI income would improve 65% within the first quarter to $3.8 billion.
“The diploma of success amongst the hyperscalers of their initiatives right here is clearly an space up for debate,” Cantor analyst C.J. Muse, who recommends shopping for Broadcom shares, wrote in a report on Dec. 18. “However any manner you slice it, the main focus right here will proceed to be a significant boon for these levered to customized silicon.”
Intel’s very unhealthy yr

Previous to 2024, Intel’s worst yr in the marketplace was 1974, when the inventory sank 57%.
The seeds for the corporate’s newest stumbles have been planted years in the past, as Intel missed out on cellular chips to Qualcomm, ARM and Apple.
Rival AMD began taking market share within the important PC and server CPU markets because of its productive manufacturing relationship with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Firm. Intel’s manufacturing course of has been a notch behind for years, resulting in slower and fewer power-efficient central processing items, or CPUs.
However Intel’s costliest whiff is in AI — and it is a huge purpose Gelsinger was eliminated.
Nvidia’s GPUs, initially created for video video games, have grow to be the important {hardware} within the growth of power-hungry AI fashions. Intel’s CPU, previously a very powerful and costly half in a server, has grow to be an afterthought in an AI server. The GPUs Nvidia will ship in 2025 do not even want an Intel CPU — a lot of them are paired to an Nvidia-designed ARM-based chip.
As Nvidia has reported income development of a minimum of 94% for the previous six quarters, Intel has been compelled into downsizing mode. Gross sales have declined in 9 of the previous 11 intervals. Intel introduced in August that it was reducing 15,000 jobs, or about 15% of its workforce.
“We’re working to create a leaner, easier, extra agile Intel,” board Chair Frank Yeary stated in a Dec. 2 press launch saying Gelsinger’s departure.
A giant downside for Intel is that it lacks a complete AI technique. It is touted the AI capabilities on its laptop computer chips to buyers, and launched an Nvidia competitor known as Gaudi 3. However neither the corporate’s AI PC initiative nor its Gaudi chips have gained a lot traction available in the market. Intel’s Gaudi 3 gross sales missed the corporate’s personal $500 million goal for this yr.
Late subsequent yr, Intel will launch a brand new AI chip that it codenamed Falcon Shores. It will not be constructed on Gaudi 3 structure, and can as a substitute be a GPU.
“Is it going to be fantastic? No, however it’s a good first step in getting the platform executed,” Intel interim co-CEO Michelle Holthaus stated at a monetary convention held by Barclays on Dec. 12.
Holthaus and fellow interim co-CEO David Zinsner have vowed to deal with Intel’s merchandise, leaving the destiny of Intel’s pricey foundry division unclear.
Earlier than he left, Gelsinger championed a method that concerned Intel each discovering its footing within the semiconductor market and manufacturing chips to compete with TSMC. In June, at a convention in Taipei, Gelsinger informed CNBC that when its factories rise up and working, Intel needed to construct “all people’s AI chips,” and provides corporations corresponding to Nvidia and Broadcom an alternative choice to TSMC.
Intel stated in September that it plans to show its foundry enterprise into an unbiased unit with its personal board and the potential to lift outdoors capital. However for now, Intel’s main consumer is Intel. The corporate stated it did not count on significant gross sales from exterior prospects till 2027.
On the Barclays occasion this month, Zinsner stated the separate board for the foundry enterprise is “getting stood up in the present day.” Extra broadly, he indicated that the corporate is trying to take away complexity and related prices wherever attainable.
“We’re going to continually be scrutinizing the place we’re spending cash, ensuring that we’re getting the suitable return,” Zinsner stated.
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