Intel has spent much of the past two years as Wall Street's punching bag. Then Trump walked up to a microphone and said the word "Apple."
The stock jumped about 9% in premarket trading before the opening bell.
Trump's Apple Partnership Announcement
In a Truth Social post, the President said Apple has agreed to work with Intel to design and build its chips in America, though specifics like chip volumes, timing, and contract terms weren't disclosed.
That didn't stop traders from reacting, with Intel shares climbing in premarket as soon as the headline hit.
For a company that's been losing ground to Nvidia, AMD, and Taiwan's TSMC for years, any tie to Apple is a big deal.
Apple is one of the most valuable customers in tech, and landing even a slice of its business would change Intel's story overnight.
Apple was actually one of Intel's biggest customers for years, with Intel chips inside every Mac. That started changing in 2020, when Apple announced its transition to in-house Apple Silicon chips manufactured by TSMC.
Since then, every iPhone, iPad, and Mac processor has come from TSMC's factories in Taiwan. Bringing some of that volume back to Intel would be a strategic shift, not just a financial one.
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Intel's Foundry Pivot
Intel spent years missing the AI boom that lifted nearly every other chipmaker, but the stock has staged a massive rebound - up roughly 464% over the past 12 months, with the company now sporting a market cap above $600 billion. While Nvidia became the most valuable company in the world, Intel was cutting jobs and trimming costs to stay afloat.
Intel has been trying to reinvent itself as a chipmaker that builds for other companies, not just itself. That business is called foundry, and it's where TSMC makes most of its money.
Intel wants in, but the problem has been convincing big customers to trust its factories.
Why it matters: The global foundry market generated roughly $169 billion in 2025, and TSMC controls nearly 70% of it - thanks largely to Apple, which is one of TSMC's biggest customers.
Intel has spent billions trying to catch up, pouring money into new U.S. plants in Arizona and Ohio with help from CHIPS Act subsidies.
The foundry business has been losing money for Intel - the unit posted a $2.5 billion operating loss in Q4 2025 alone and lost more than $10 billion across the full year as it tries to build scale.
An Apple partnership, if it holds up, would be the first real sign the pivot is working. That's why buyers didn't wait for details before bidding the stock higher.
What To Watch
The size of the partnership hasn't been confirmed, leaving investors to wonder whether Apple is committing real production volume or something smaller like a research tie-up.
The difference between those two outcomes is the difference between a one-day pop and a real turnaround story.
Apple itself hasn't publicly confirmed the announcement, leaving traders to fill in the gaps for now.
Watch for follow-up details from either company in the coming days, especially anything on chip volume or which Intel plant would handle production.
Traders aren't waiting for the fine print.
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