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INTC May 2024 36.000 call

OPR - OPR Delayed price. Currency in USD
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0.04000.0000 (0.00%)
As of 01:50PM EDT. Market open.
Full screen
Previous close0.0400
Open0.0400
Bid0.0000
Ask0.0000
Strike36.00
Expiry date2024-05-24
Day's range0.0400 - 0.0500
Contract rangeN/A
Volume8
Open interest1.12k
  • Yahoo Finance Video

    US chip output to see massive growth by 2032: Industry leader

    The Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) projects the United States' manufacturing capacity for semiconductors to increase by more than three-fold by 2032. The Biden administration sought to expand domestic chip productions via the CHIPS Act by awarding grants to chipmakers Intel (INTC), Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSM), and Samsung (005930.KS) in recent months. SIA CEO and President John Neuffer joins Yahoo Finance's Akiko Fujita to review the expected growth for chip fabrication and foundry businesses through the CHIPS Act investments into the private sector. "It took us decades to get to this point," Neuffer discloses. "The two big numbers that I find most interesting coming out of this report are what would our global manufacturing footprint be without the CHIPS Act and would've fallen to 8%. With the CHIPS Act, it's at 14%. That's nearly the double the positive result. So... it's gonna take us years to kind of climb back. But with the CHIPS Act and with all these private sector investments, we absolutely turned the corner and are heading now in, in the right direction." Neuffer broadly estimates that without the invigoration of the CHIPS Act, the US would be producing next to zero of the world's chips in that 2032 timeframe: "With the CHIPS Act... we'll be manufacturing 28% of those chips. So that, that's the kind of fundamental shift in terrain." Turning his attention to China's own semiconductor infrastructure, Neuffer characterizes the nation's chip industry as "very focused" in its output of legacy chips. But finds that China's lean into manufacturing will create an "over capacity" of chips that could lead to several down cycles for American chip makers. Some global officials have stood by their view that China's manufacturing push, driving global competition in areas such as chips and electric vehicles (EV), isn't going to "fix the challenge" in its economy brought on by deflating consumer sentiment. Catch more of Yahoo Finance's coverage at the 2024 Milken Institute Global Conference. This post was written by Luke Carberry Mogan.

  • Bloomberg

    US Revokes Intel, Qualcomm Licenses to Sell Chips to Huawei

    (Bloomberg) -- The US has revoked licenses allowing Huawei Technologies Co. to buy semiconductors from Qualcomm Inc. and Intel Corp., according to people familiar with the matter, further tightening export restrictions against the Chinese telecom equipment maker.Most Read from BloombergTrump Judge Indefinitely Postpones Documents Case TrialOne Out of Every 24 New York City Residents Is Now a MillionaireAmericans Are Racking Up ‘Phantom Debt’ That Wall Street Can’t TrackTrump’s Private Life Expos

  • Benzinga

    Intel's New Venture in Japan: Pioneering Automation in Chip Manufacturing by 2028

    Intel Corp (NASDAQ:INTC) Intel has partnered with 14 Japanese companies, including Omron and Yamaha Motor, to develop automation technologies for back-end semiconductor processes like packaging. Under the leadership of Kunimasa Suzuki, who heads Intel’s operations in Japan, this consortium plans to allocate tens of billions of yen—potentially over 10 billion yen ($65 million)—to achieve operational technology by 2028. The focus is to enhance the traditionally labor-intensive back-end steps, such