David Zinsner
Analyst · Melius
Thank you, Lip-Bu. We delivered robust Q1 results, reflecting strong demand and better-than-expected available supply. We also benefited from improved product mix and pricing actions, in part to offset higher costs. First quarter revenue was $13.6 billion, $1.4 billion above the midpoint of our guide. Q1 revenue would have been meaningfully higher, but demand continues to outpace our growing supply. Our collective AI-driven businesses now represent 60% of revenue and grew 40% year-over-year. These results reflect real and deliberate changes we have made to be more responsive and accountable. This quarter, our teams worked directly and diligently with customers to reach mutually beneficial outcomes in weeks, not months. We value the partnership and support shown by our customers, partners and suppliers as we work to navigate this environment together. Non-GAAP gross margin came in at 41%, approximately 650 basis points ahead of guidance due to the combination of higher volume, which included previously reserved inventory, mix and pricing. In addition, better yields on Intel 18A offset some of the higher costs we always incur in the early part of ramping a new node. We delivered first quarter non-GAAP earnings per share of $0.29 versus our guidance of breakeven on higher revenue, stronger gross margins and continued spending discipline. Q1 EPS included a roughly $0.06 onetime gain in interest and other. Q1 operating cash flow was $1.1 billion with gross CapEx of $5 billion in the quarter and adjusted free cash flow of minus $2 billion. Moving to segment results. CCG revenue was $7.7 billion, down 6% sequentially and better than our expectations. Even with improved factory output, demand outstripped supply against a client TAM that remains resilient despite industry-wide component shortages and inflationary pressures. Our AI PC revenue grew 8% sequentially and now represents greater than 60% of our client CPU mix. Operating profit for CCG was $2.5 billion, 33% of revenue and up approximately $300 million quarter-over-quarter on improved mix and product margins, sales of previously reserved inventory, better 18A yields and lower operating expenses. Within the quarter, CCG launched Core Ultra Series 3 and expanded our offerings across consumer, commercial and edge. This has proven to be our strongest product launch in 5 years, delivering better performance per watt, stronger integrated graphics and more capable on-device AI features, all while maintaining our broad ecosystem of compatibility that partners and customers value. In Q1, CCG also expanded the reach of our Core family by launching the Intel Core Series 3 processor, which brings the latest IP, modern features and all-day battery life to the mainstream for the first time. We're enabling a new class of mainstream systems that once again set the standard for everyday computing. DCAI revenue was $5.1 billion, an increase of 7% sequentially and 22% year-over-year, well above expectations and reinforcing the strong year of growth for DCAI we signaled 90 days ago. Strength continued across all segments and customers as investments in CPUs are accelerating to support the evolution of AI from foundational training to inference and from inference to agentic. We also saw strong ASIC growth with revenue up more than 30% sequentially and nearly doubling year-over-year. Operating profit for DCAI was $1.5 billion, 31% of revenue and up approximately $292 million quarter-over-quarter on improved product margins, better cycle times and yields, especially on Intel 3 and lower operating expenses. Within the quarter, DCAI signed multiple long-term agreements, including Google, supporting our view that the current business momentum is sustainable. In addition, Xeon 6 was selected as the host CPU for NVIDIA's DGX Rubin NVL8 systems, and Xeon remains the most deployed host CPU due to its industry-leading memory, security and networking orchestration. Lastly, DCAI also established a multiyear collaboration with SambaNova to design a next-generation heterogeneous AI inference architecture combining SambaNova's RDUs and Intel Xeon 6 processors. Intel Foundry delivered revenue of $5.4 billion, up 20% sequentially on increased EUV wafer mix driven by Intel 3 and significant growth in 18A. External foundry revenue was $174 million in the quarter. Intel Foundry operating loss in Q1 was $2.4 billion and improved $72 million quarter-over-quarter as better yields across Intel 4, 3 and 18A drove higher gross margins. This was mostly offset by increased operating expenses associated with an intentional step-up in Intel 14A investments to support both internal and external customer evaluations. As a reminder, Intel Foundry carries the bulk of the costs associated with the early ramp of Intel 18A, and we expect Intel Foundry's operating loss to improve through the year as 18A continues to ramp into volume and yields improve further. Within the quarter, Intel Foundry delivered output above our expectations, drove steady improvements in yields and met key 14A milestones. Intel Foundry also added to its backlog of advanced packaging services and announced a multiyear expansion of our back-end facilities in Malaysia. This expansion will help support the committed demand that will begin to convert to revenue in 2027. Turning to All Other. Revenue came in at $628 million and was up 9% sequentially due to a strong quarter for Mobileye. Collectively, the category delivered an operating profit of $102 million. Now turning to guidance. As we look ahead, we remain mindful that the macroeconomic and geopolitical environments are dynamic. Views on global growth, policy and trade continue to shape customer behavior and investment decisions. In addition, constraints and rising prices around key components like memory, wafers and substrates are driving higher costs that could impact demand for our product at some point in the year. We're prudently planning for PC demand to weaken in the second half of the year and expect the full year PC unit TAM to be down low double-digit percent in line with industry peers and experts. Offsetting this, near-term customer order patterns remain very robust across all of our businesses. In addition, our confidence in the sustained growth of CPUs driven by the AI infrastructure build-out is growing. Our outlook for server CPU demand has improved over the last 90 days, and we expect a strong year of double-digit unit growth for the industry and for us with momentum extending into 2027. Combining all of these factors, we're guiding Q2 revenue to a range of $13.8 billion to $14.8 billion, up 2% to 9% sequentially. As we work hard to support the needs of all of our customers, we expect sequential revenue growth in both CCG and DCAI on improved supply and a full quarter of pricing actions, with DCAI up double digits. At the midpoint of $14.3 billion, we forecast a gross margin of 39%, a tax rate of 11% and EPS of $0.20, all on a non-GAAP basis. Our Q2 gross margin guide declines modestly from Q1 due to a meaningfully larger contribution from Intel 18A, still early in its ramp and some inventory benefits in Q1 that aren't expected to repeat in Q2. Before I close, I'll share some additional insights on the full year. We expect our factory network to continue increasing available supply in the third and fourth quarters, though at a more measured pace than we anticipated 90 days ago, reflecting the base effect of much stronger-than-expected first half output. We also expect 2026 revenue on a half-on-half basis to follow the seasonal trends experienced over the last 10 years with servers above and PCs below. We were very pleased with Q1 gross margins, and we will continue to push for gross margin expansion. It's my top priority. Our foundry team is delivering consistent yield and throughput improvements across all process nodes, which will help gross margins. With that said, Intel 18A is still early in its ramp and rising input costs, especially in memory, present growing headwinds in the second half that we need to overcome. For OpEx in 2026, we have been directionally targeting $16 billion, but are likely to be higher due to inflationary pressures, variable compensation and targeted investments we are making to capture the opportunities ahead. The drive for efficiency is core to the new culture Lip-Bu is creating, and we will remain laser-focused on finding additional operational improvements and maximizing ROI on all of our investing activities. We forecast capital expenditures in 2026 to be flat to last year versus our prior expectation of flat to down, reflecting increased capacity investments to support committed demand and a continued emphasis on improving fab productivity and output. We now expect expenditures to be roughly equal across the year and still to be heavily weighted towards the equipment that directly grows wafer outs to support growth this year and next. We recently closed the transaction to repurchase the 49% equity interest in the joint investment in Fab 34 in Ireland, a highly accretive deal, allowing our shareholders to participate in the full economic benefits from a fab just now hitting its stride. As a result, we now expect noncontrolling interest, or NCI, to net to approximately $250 million in each of Q2, Q3 and Q4 of this year and be approximately $1.1 billion for 2027 and 2028 on a GAAP basis. Lastly, excluding the buyout of the Fab 34 joint investment, we still expect positive adjusted free cash flow for the full year. As a reminder, we funded our purchase with approximately $7.7 billion in cash and $6.5 billion in new debt. We remain committed to retiring all $2.5 billion of maturities as they come due this year and all $3.8 billion in 2027. In closing, Q1 was a strong quarter financially and operationally. All demand signals continue to emphasize the growing and essential role of the CPU in the AI era and the unprecedented demand for leading -edge wafers and advanced packaging to realize the vision of driving silicon-based intelligence to the edge efficiently and at scale. Our confidence is growing. We have the right team and the broad IP portfolio needed to solve our customers' most pressing economic challenges and drive long-term value for our shareholders. With that, I'll turn it over to John to start the Q&A.