Investment analysis by Ruslan Averin — originally published at averin.com.
Intel is up roughly 450% in 2026, and on June 12 it added another 6.5%. The proximate trigger: Google routed an order for more than 3 million TPU chips — for 2028 production — to Intel Foundry rather than the default winner, TSMC.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Friday move | +6.5% |
| 2026 to date | ~+450% |
| Catalyst | Google 3M+ TPU order to Intel Foundry |
| BofA action | Upgrade to Buy, target $135 |
| Q1 2026 | Revenue $13.6B, adj. EPS $0.29 vs breakeven |
| Streak | 6th straight quarter beating own guidance |
Why it moved
Our analysts read the Google order as the validation Intel's turnaround was missing. For years the foundry thesis was a slide deck; a hyperscaler diverting millions of chips away from TSMC is a customer voting with a purchase order. Bank of America's upgrade from Underperform to Buy, citing server-CPU visibility and external foundry traction, is the sell-side catching up to a fact the tape already priced. When a stock is up 450%, the debate is no longer whether the company is alive — it is what is already in the number.
What it means for you
A 450% run is a different risk profile than a recovery trade. The team's view: the operational turn is real, but so is the expectation now embedded in the price. One foundry order does not make Intel a structural TSMC competitor — yield, cadence, and repeat customers do, and those take years to prove. The reward is no longer cheap; the burden of proof has shifted to execution.
Bottom line: The Google order is genuine validation, not hype — but the easy money was the first 450%. We treat INTC here as an execution story to monitor on pullbacks, not a value entry.
More market analysis by Ruslan Averin at averin.com.
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