Intel Mass Layoffs: Chipmaker to Fire 19,000 Employees in Major Cost-cutting Move

Intel Mass Layoffs: Chipmaker to Fire 19,000 Employees in Major Cost-cutting Move

New Delhi: Chipmaker Intel has announced it will cut 15% of its workforce — about 15,000 jobs — in an effort to turn its business around and compete with more successful rivals like Nvidia and AMD. The chipmaker has announced a downsizing of its workforce as it is embarked on a lengthy journey to recovery and its new $10 billion cost-saving plan for 2025. 

With the company currently employing more than 125,000 workers, layoffs could affect as many as 19,000 people. In a memo to staff, Intel Corp. CEO Pat Gelsinger said, “Simply put, we must align our cost structure with our new operating model and fundamentally change the way we operate,” he wrote in the memo published on Intel’s website. “Our revenues have not grown as expected — and we’ve yet to fully benefit from powerful trends, like AI. Our costs are too high, our margins are too low.”

The job cuts follow a disappointing quarter and forecast for the iconic chipmaker, founded in 1968 at the start of the PC revolution.

Next week, Gelsinger wrote, Intel will announce an “enhanced retirement offering” for eligible employees and offer an application program for voluntary departures. “These decisions have challenged me to my core, and this is the hardest thing I’ve done in my career,” he said. The bulk of the layoffs are expected to be completed this year.

The Santa Clara, California-based company is also suspending its stock dividend as part of a broader cost-cutting strategy.

Intel reported a loss for its second quarter along with a slight revenue decline and has forecasted third-quarter revenues below Wall Street expectations. As a result, the company’s stock plummeted 19% in after-hours trading, potentially erasing about $24 billion in market value when the stock market opens on Friday.

For the April-June period, Intel posted a loss of $1.6 billion, or 38 cents per share, compared to a profit of $1.5 billion, or 35 cents per share, a year earlier. Adjusted earnings, excluding special items, were 2 cents per share. Revenue decreased by 1%, falling to $12.8 billion from $12.9 billion.

Analysts, on average, were expecting earnings of 10 cents per share on revenue of $12.9 billion, according to a poll by FactSet.

“Intel’s announcement of a significant cost-cutting plan including layoffs may bolster its near-term financials, but this move alone is insufficient to redefine its position in the evolving chip market,” said eMarketer analyst Jacob Bourne. “The company faces a critical juncture as it leverages U.S. investment in domestic manufacturing and the surging global demand for AI chips to establish itself in chip fabrication.”

Gelsinger noted in a conference call with analysts that Intel has previously said that its investments in the AI PC market would pressure its profit margins over the short term but should benefit the company in the long term.

“We believe the trade-offs are worth it. The AI PC will grow from less than 10% of the market today to greater than 50% in 2026,” he said.

Unlike its rivals like Nvidia, Intel manufactures chips in addition to designing them. It has been working to build up its foundry business making semiconductors in the U.S., competing with rivals such as market leader Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. or TSMC.

Helped by Gelsinger’s lobbying efforts since he took the company’s helm in 2021, Intel has been a major beneficiary of the 2022 CHIPS and Science Act. The Biden administration helped shepherd that through Congress amid concerns after the pandemic that the loss of access to chips made in Asia could plunge the US economy into recession.

In March, President Joe Biden celebrated an agreement to provide Intel with up to $8.5 billion in direct funding and $11 billion in loans for computer chip plants around the country, talking up the investment in the political battleground state of Arizona and calling it a way of “bringing the future back to America.” At the time, Gelsinger called the CHIPS Act “the most critical industrial policy legislation since World War II.”

In September 2022, Biden praised Intel as a job creator with its plans to open a new plant near Columbus, Ohio. The president praised the company for plans to “build a workforce of the future” for the $20 billion project, which he said would generate 7,000 construction jobs and 3,000 full-time jobs set to pay an average of $135,000 a year.

“The U.S. government wants to reinvigorate domestic manufacturing, especially this is the area of advanced computer chips,” Bourne said. “And Intel has been kind of earmarked for this money. But there’s a lot of infrastructure that goes into this, there’s the building of these facilities, which are really highly specialized — and then you also need to upskill the local workforce where these plants are located. And so it takes time. This is not something that happens overnight.”

 Intel Mass Layoffs: Chipmaker to Fire 19,000 Employees in Major Cost-cutting Move  world-news World News | Latest International Global World News | Todays Breaking News Headlines