Gate News message, April 27 — Intel’s stock has climbed 110% this year and reached a new all-time high on Friday, marking a significant turnaround for the chipmaker 25 years after its previous peak. The resurgence reflects a broader shift in the technology sector, where the AI transition is creating stark winners and losers: hardware companies building AI infrastructure are thriving, while software and services firms face mounting pressure.
Within the S&P 500’s information technology sector, which is up 8% year to date, a sharp divergence has emerged between hardware and software. Semiconductor equipment makers like Applied Materials and Lam Research have surged roughly 63%, while IT consulting firms including Accenture, IBM, and Cognizant have declined nearly 28%. This pattern reflects a classic cycle of “creative destruction,” where innovation simultaneously builds new industries and destabilizes existing ones — a dynamic that previously reshaped mainframes with PCs, and PCs with mobile devices.
Intel’s opportunity stems from evolving AI infrastructure needs. GPU makers like Nvidia led the initial boom as companies needed graphics processors to train AI models. This broadened to memory chipmakers, power companies, and data storage firms. Now, CPUs — the processors Intel manufactures — are becoming essential for day-to-day AI inference and deployment. “The CPU is reinserting itself as the indispensable foundation of the AI era,” Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan said during the company’s investor call Friday.
However, early winners in tech transitions don’t always endure. Telecom companies served as “picks-and-shovels” during the internet era but failed to sustain their gains. Conversely, Microsoft recovered from PC-era decline through cloud computing, and Apple transitioned from PCs to create the mobile era. As analyst Ed Yardeni noted, “You are either creative or you get destroyed” — underscoring the uncertain outcome even for today’s frontrunners.
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