Intel Corporation shares tumbled 6.6% in pre-open trading, snapping back from the recent intraday apex of $141.45 reached in the previous session. The pullback follows an extraordinary ascent in the stock over the last year, during which the share price rose by more than 500%.
The sharp retreat is being driven in part by profit-taking and a broad decline across high-beta technology names. Over a compressed period, Intel accumulated several high-visibility commercial and strategic developments that helped fuel the rally: a public announcement that Apple had agreed to collaborate with Intel to design and produce chips in the United States; confirmation that Intel will supply host CPUs for Nvidia's next-generation DGX systems; and a Google order for tensor processing units. Those announcements arrived within weeks of one another and materially lifted investor expectations for Intel's foundry opportunity.
Still, skepticism about valuation has persisted among some analysts. A bearish research note published recently argued that Intel's 12-month fair value is substantially lower than where the stock was trading, assigning a sell rating. That note highlighted Intel's ongoing negative free cash flow and pointed to a $2.4 billion operating loss at the Intel Foundry segment in Q1 2026 as evidence of near-term financial strain.
Manufacturing execution remains a focus for investors. Intel's 18A node has entered risk production on schedule, but yields are reported to be below levels that would make the node immediately profitable. That shortfall means the company faces a structural risk of margin dilution in the near term even as the longer-term logic for growing the foundry business gains credibility.
The broader market offered little protection for the stock's slide. The Nasdaq Composite traded down about 1.3% as pressure on technology names continued, while the S&P 500 was modestly lower and the Dow Jones Industrial Average was marginally positive. Major semiconductor peers including AMD, Micron and Broadcom have also felt selling pressure in recent sessions as investors reassess stretched valuations across the chip sector following a powerful, AI-driven rally.
Taken together, today's selloff reads as a consolidation after a parabolic advance rather than an immediate deterioration of Intel's underlying prospects. The shares remain near multi-year highs, and the foundry partnership pipeline - anchored by Apple, Google and Nvidia - continues to underpin the bullish case. At the same time, some investors are electing to reduce exposure at record price levels, leaving room for short-term volatility.