Bank of America sees Intel's new strategy as credit positive, lowering debt estimates.
ByAinvest
Tuesday, Aug 12, 2025 10:22 am ET1min read
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Intel's current cash balance stands at $21 billion as of June 28, which could facilitate material debt reduction, according to BofA analysts. The company's new approach could also help mitigate challenges such as stemming market share losses, reinvigorating its product line for AI workloads, and resolving uncertainties around the 18A node [1].
Despite the positive outlook, BofA cautions that Intel faces numerous challenges, including geopolitical and management issues, such as opposition to CEO Lip-Bu Tan and reports of board turbulence. The company's upcoming maturities, including $2.25 billion in July and $1.5 billion in March 2026, may be addressed through a mix of commercial paper and cash on hand, possibly supported by asset sales such as Mobileye, Altera, or a portion of its Network and Edge (NEX) business [1].
BofA has also lowered its 2025 and 2026 EBITDA estimates for Intel by 8% and 18% respectively, reflecting softer revenue and margins. The investment bank forecasts gross leverage at 4.1x by year-end 2025, slightly higher than prior estimates [1].
References:
[1] https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/bofa-intels-new-approach-may-ease-execution-pressure-4185352
[2] https://finance.yahoo.com/news/bofa-intel-approach-may-ease-141639928.html
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Bank of America views Intel's shift in strategy as a "credit positive," reducing execution risk and potentially leading to material debt reduction. The company's new approach focuses on scrutinizing customer alignment and returns, and engaging customers early to form demand before capex spend. Despite challenges, Intel could use a mix of commercial paper and cash on hand, possibly supported by asset sales, to address upcoming maturities. BofA lowered its 2025 and 2026 EBITDA estimates for Intel, forecasting gross leverage at 4.1x by year-end 2025.
Bank of America (BofA) has expressed a positive outlook on Intel's recent strategic shift, deeming it a "credit positive" move. The investment bank highlighted Intel's new approach, which involves scrutinizing customer alignment and returns, and engaging customers early to form demand before capital expenditure (capex) spend. This strategy is expected to reduce execution risk around the 14A node development, potentially transforming Intel into a "fabless/quasi-fabless semiconductor" with lower capital intensity and liquidity needs [1].Intel's current cash balance stands at $21 billion as of June 28, which could facilitate material debt reduction, according to BofA analysts. The company's new approach could also help mitigate challenges such as stemming market share losses, reinvigorating its product line for AI workloads, and resolving uncertainties around the 18A node [1].
Despite the positive outlook, BofA cautions that Intel faces numerous challenges, including geopolitical and management issues, such as opposition to CEO Lip-Bu Tan and reports of board turbulence. The company's upcoming maturities, including $2.25 billion in July and $1.5 billion in March 2026, may be addressed through a mix of commercial paper and cash on hand, possibly supported by asset sales such as Mobileye, Altera, or a portion of its Network and Edge (NEX) business [1].
BofA has also lowered its 2025 and 2026 EBITDA estimates for Intel by 8% and 18% respectively, reflecting softer revenue and margins. The investment bank forecasts gross leverage at 4.1x by year-end 2025, slightly higher than prior estimates [1].
References:
[1] https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/bofa-intels-new-approach-may-ease-execution-pressure-4185352
[2] https://finance.yahoo.com/news/bofa-intel-approach-may-ease-141639928.html

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