Analysts do not believe in the “deal of the century” – Qualcomm does not need Intel entirely, and regulators will be against it

A potential deal to buy Intel would accelerate Qualcomm’s diversification but would also saddle the chipmaker with a money-losing semiconductor division that would likely be difficult to turn profitable or sell. Reuters writes about this with reference to its own sources among industry analysts.

The deal will also face intense antitrust scrutiny around the world as it will combine two of the world’s most important chipmakers, becoming the largest in the industry’s history and creating a giant with significant market share in smartphone, PC and server chips. During trading on Monday, Intel shares rose almost 3%, helped by media reports about Qualcomm’s plans to buy the struggling chipmaker. Against this background, the price of Qualcomm securities decreased by 1.8%.

«Rumors of a deal between Qualcomm and Intel are intriguing on many levels and, from a pure product perspective, make some sense since they have a number of complementary product lines. However, the likelihood of this happening is extremely low. In addition, it is unlikely that Qualcomm will want to acquire all of Intel, and trying to separate the food business from the chip business is simply impossible now,” said Bob O’Donnell, founder of TECHnalysis Research.

Once dominant in the semiconductor industry, Intel is facing one of the worst periods in its five-decade history, largely due to mounting losses in the contract manufacturing business the chipmaker is developing in hopes of challenging TSMC. Intel’s capitalization fell below $100 billion for the first time in three decades. This happened against the backdrop of the fact that the company failed to take advantage of the boom in generative neural networks by refusing to invest in OpenAI. At the same time, Qualcomm’s capitalization level based on the results of recent exchange trading was about $190 billion.

Qualcomm, which counts Apple among its clients, is looking to expand its business beyond making smartphone chips. The company already makes semiconductor products for other industries such as automobiles and computers. However, the company is still heavily dependent on the smartphone market, which has been in decline in recent years. According to the source, Qualcomm CEO Cristiano Amon is personally involved in negotiations with Intel and is exploring various possibilities for concluding a deal.

admin

Share
Published by
admin

Recent Posts

Express test of external SSD-drive MSI Datamag 20Gbps

Today we will talk about a new gadget from MSI, which the manufacturer itself mysteriously…

11 minutes ago

Apple to Release Updated MacBook Air with M4 Chip in March 2025

Apple is preparing to launch updated 13- and 15-inch versions of the MacBook Air laptop,…

2 hours ago

Official Radeon RX 9070 XT Relative Performance Leaked to Press

The VideoCardz portal writes that AMD held a closed briefing for journalists this week, where…

2 hours ago

Kindergarten of some kind: former German data center converted into preschool

Bonn, Germany, is in dire need of kindergartens, so they are sometimes placed in the…

2 hours ago

Apple to Improve iPhone 17 Pro Camera with Focus on Video

According to online sources, Apple will focus more on improving video recording in the new…

3 hours ago

GeForce RTX 5070 Ti with “fallen off” ROPs loses up to 11% performance in synthetic tests

It was previously reported that some GeForce RTX 5090/RTX 5090D graphics cards, and as it…

3 hours ago