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Intel stock jumps on BofA upgrade as AI demand fuels growth outlook

Intel stock jumps on BofA upgrade as AI demand fuels growth outlook
Ananthu C U
Jun 11, 2026, 09:02 AM

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INTC

Buy Intel (INTC). BofA upgrade is backed by a clear demand narrative: server CPU growth tied to AI/agentic workloads, plus tangible foundry validation from Alphabet’s multi-million TPU order. The market is also likely to re-rate Intel’s packaging competitiveness (EMIB >90% yields) as CoWoS capacity tightens. Recent results already show Data Center/AI strength, supporting follow-through beyond the headline upgrade.

Key Risk: Intel’s process and foundry execution slips—yields, timelines, or scale don’t improve enough to turn customer interest into sustained revenue.

AMD

Buy AMD (AMD). BofA raised its price target and server CPU market outlook implies more share capture from AI-driven compute buildouts. If Intel’s foundry/package progress is real, it still doesn’t remove the near-term reality: hyperscalers are buying more compute now, and AMD is positioned to benefit from that spend while Intel works through manufacturing ramp.

Key Risk: AI server demand slows or customers delay upgrades, causing AMD’s growth expectations to compress despite the upgrade optimism.

  • Intel jumps after BofA upgrade and higher AI-driven CPU forecasts.
  • Alphabet's TPU order strengthens confidence in Intel Foundry.
  • Nvidia, Tesla interest adds momentum to Intel's foundry push.

Intel shares INTC surged 4% in premarket trading after Bank of America upgraded the semiconductor company to Buy from Underperform and raised its price target to $135 from $96.

The brokerage cited growing demand for central processing units (CPUs) and Intel's positioning to benefit from the rise of agentic artificial intelligence.

The upgrade comes as analysts increasingly focus on the role of CPUs in supporting next-generation AI systems, alongside the continued expansion of advanced semiconductor manufacturing and packaging technologies.

BofA raises server CPU market forecast

Following discussions with industry executives and customers at the BofA Global Tech Conference, the brokerage increased its estimate for the global server CPU market to more than $170 billion, up from a previous forecast of $125 billion.

The revised outlook implies nearly five-fold growth and a 37% compound annual growth rate (CAGR) between 2025 and 2030.

According to BofA, the emergence of agentic AI systems capable of carrying out complex tasks with limited human input is expected to create substantial opportunities for both traditional x86 chipmakers and companies developing ARM-based processors.

As part of its revised outlook, the firm also increased its price target on AMD to $560 from $500, implying nearly 24% upside from Wednesday's closing price.

Alphabet order highlights Intel foundry progress

Separate industry developments have added to optimism surrounding Intel's long-term strategy.

A significant commitment from Alphabet's recent plans to manufacture Tensor Processing Units through Intel Foundry.

The plan is being viewed as a major validation of Intel's efforts to expand its contract manufacturing business.

According to The Information report, Alphabet has committed to a three-million-unit TPU order for 2028, representing an estimated 50% of Google's projected TPU output for that year.

The decision appears to be driven by both technology and supply chain considerations.

Intel's Embedded Multi-die Interconnect Bridge (EMIB) packaging technology has reportedly achieved yield rates above 90%, positioning it as an alternative to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing's CoWoS packaging platform, which faces capacity constraints amid strong AI-related demand.

Google's Gemini AI platform now serves more than 900 million monthly active users, increasing the company's need for computing capacity and manufacturing diversification.

Foundry momentum and execution risks remain key

Industry interest in Intel's foundry business appears to be expanding beyond Alphabet.

Nvidia is evaluating Intel's 18A process node for a future multi-die graphics processor, while Tesla has committed to Intel's 14A process technology for custom silicon used in its Terafab AI computing complex in Austin.

These developments are occurring amid broader efforts by US technology companies to reduce supply chain dependence on Taiwan and increase domestic semiconductor production.

Despite the positive developments, execution remains a central consideration for investors.

Intel must successfully deliver its process technology roadmap and manufacturing capabilities at scale to convert potential opportunities into sustained revenue growth.

Recent financial results have also supported the bullish narrative.

Intel reported first-quarter 2026 revenue of $13.58 billion, exceeding consensus estimates by more than $1.1 billion, with strength in its Data Center and AI division contributing to the outperformance.