Intel secured a landmark deal with the Trump Administration, which will see the U.S. government invest $8.9 billion in Intel common stock to reinforce American leadership in semiconductor manufacturing. The equity purchase—funded through previously awarded but unpaid CHIPS Act grants and Secure Enclave program allocations—gives Washington a 9.9% passive stake in Intel at a discounted share price of $20.47. This follows $2.2 billion in CHIPS funding already disbursed, bringing the government’s total direct investment in Intel to $11.1 billion.
The deal underscores Intel’s ongoing $100 billion-plus buildout of domestic fabs, including a new high-volume manufacturing site in Arizona set to ramp later this year. Intel also committed to continue delivering secure chips to the Department of Defense under the Secure Enclave program. Terms eliminate claw-back provisions from earlier CHIPS Act grants, while providing the government with a five-year warrant for additional shares should Intel’s foundry ownership fall below 51%.
Industry leaders including Microsoft, Dell, HP, and AWS voiced strong support, citing the critical importance of U.S.-based advanced chipmaking for both AI innovation and national security. “As the only semiconductor company that does leading-edge logic R&D and manufacturing in the U.S., Intel is deeply committed to ensuring the world’s most advanced technologies are American made,” said Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan.
• U.S. government invests $8.9B in Intel, taking a 9.9% passive equity stake
• Investment funded by CHIPS Act grants ($5.7B) and Secure Enclave program ($3.2B)
• Intel’s total federal funding commitment rises to $11.1B
• Agreement eliminates claw-back/profit-sharing terms from earlier grants
• New Arizona fab to begin advanced chip production this year as part of $100B expansion
🌐 Analysis: This marks the most significant federal equity participation in a U.S. semiconductor company to date, signaling a new model for government-industry alignment. Intel, which has struggled in recent years to regain technology leadership, gains both capital and political backing as it competes with TSMC and Samsung. The deal also reinforces Washington’s strategy of securing domestic control over advanced logic manufacturing—an area where Intel remains the sole U.S. player. Rival initiatives such as TSMC’s Arizona fabs and Samsung’s Texas plant continue under different subsidy models, but the equity stake in Intel suggests a deeper national-security-driven alignment.
This government stake builds on the $2 billion investment by SoftBank earlier this summer, which signaled renewed institutional confidence in Intel’s ability to ramp up U.S. manufacturing and AI chip production . SoftBank’s equity injection helped calm market sentiment and provided a timely financial boost, which now complements the Trump Administration’s $8.9 billion equity investment to fortify Intel’s recovery strategy.
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