Intel’s extraordinary rally gathered pace on Monday as the chipmaker punched through to new highs, propelled by a deepening conviction that its foundry and packaging bets are more than just strategic theatre. The stock touched an intraday peak of EUR 122.90 before settling at EUR 121.96 — a 5.59% gain that extended its year-to-date surge to around 258%. Earlier in the session, a new 52-week high of EUR 120.36 had already been recorded.
Behind the headline moves lies a quieter but potentially transformative catalyst: advanced semiconductor packaging. Mizuho Securities analyst Vijay Rakesh lifted his price target on Intel from $128 to $135, keeping a Neutral rating but drawing attention to the company’s edge in EMIB-T and Foveros packaging technologies. Rakesh estimates these could capture between 10% and 15% of the global advanced-packaging market — a segment that is fast becoming a critical bottleneck for AI hardware supply chains.
That packaging advantage complements the larger foundry narrative. President Trump confirmed on June 18 a prospective partnership with Apple for domestic chip production, a single-day catalyst that sent Intel shares up over 10%. Even more consequential is a Google order for more than three million Tensor Processing Units slated for 2028 production, awarded to Intel Foundry rather than industry leader TSMC. Bank of America responded with a rare double upgrade and a price target of $135, noting that Intel’s 18A-P process node has entered risk production on schedule and that Nvidia is evaluating the node for a future multi-chip design — though no order has yet been placed.
On the product side, Intel is also preparing to revive its Raptor Lake microarchitecture under the codename “Raptor Lake Next,” targeting the gaming notebook segment with the Core 200 HX series. By maintaining DDR4 compatibility, the strategy aims to offer cost-effective solutions that allow manufacturers to work through existing inventories. Production is expected to start in late January 2027.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Intel?
The technical picture underscores the intensity of the rally. The 14-day RSI sits at 66.7 — not yet overbought — while the stock trades a staggering 146.65% above its 200-day moving average of EUR 48.80. Annualized 30-day volatility remains elevated at 82.31%, a reminder that the path higher has been anything but smooth. The share price now sits just 2.07% below Monday’s intraday high.
Yet the euphoria is not without its uncomfortable contradictions. Intel continues to lose server-market share to AMD, even as its management paints a rosy picture of foundry-driven renewal. The moment Nvidia formally commits to an Intel node would be a seismic validation; for now, it remains prospective. Meanwhile, the market has already priced in a great deal of future earnings — leaving little room for disappointment.
Monday’s broader Nasdaq reshuffling only amplified the sector rotation already under way. Chipmakers and hardware providers were rewarded, while platform and content stocks took hits. Intel, Micron, and Insmed led the winners on the index; Arm, Netflix, and Alphabet were among the laggards. For Intel, the test will be whether its packaging and foundry achievements can translate into sustainable profitability — and whether the two upgrades from Mizuho and BofA mark the beginning of a broader consensus or simply a momentary peak in optimism.
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