Intel has divested its entire stake in Arm Holdings during the second quarter, raising approximately $147 million. Alongside this, Intel sold its stake in cybersecurity firm ZeroFox and reduced its holdings in Astera Labs, all as part of a broader effort to manage costs and recover cash amid significant financial challenges.

The sale of Intel's 1.18 million shares in Arm Holdings, as reported in a recent SEC filing, comes at a time when the company is struggling with substantial financial losses. Despite the $147 million generated from the sale, Intel reported a $120 million net loss on its equity investments for the quarter, which is a part of a larger $1.6 billion loss that Intel faced during this period.

In addition to selling its stake in Arm, Intel also exited its investment in ZeroFox and reduced its involvement with Astera Labs, a company known for developing connectivity platforms for enterprise hardware. These moves are in line with Intel's strategy to reduce costs and stabilize its financial position as it faces ongoing market challenges.

Despite the divestment, Intel's past investment in Arm was likely driven by strategic considerations. Arm Holdings is a significant force in the semiconductor industry, with its designs powering most mobile devices, and, for obvious reasons, Intel would like to address these. Intel and Arm are also collaborating on datacenter platforms tailored for Intel's 18A process technology. Additionally, Arm might view Intel as a potential licensee for its technologies and a valuable partner for other companies that license Arm's designs.

Intel's investment in Astera Labs was also a strategic one as the company probably wanted to secure steady supply of smart retimers, smart cable modems, and CXL memory controller, which are used in volumes in datacenters and Intel is certainly interested in selling as many datacenter CPUs as possible.

Intel's financial struggles were highlighted earlier this month when the company released a disappointing earnings report, which led to a 33% drop in its stock value, erasing billions of dollars of capitalization. To counter these difficulties, Intel announced plans to cut 15,000 jobs and implement other expense reductions. The company has also suspended its dividend, signaling the depth of its efforts to conserve cash and focus on recovery. When it comes to divestment of Arm stock, the need for immediate financial stabilization has presumably taken precedence, leading to the decision.

Source: Reuters

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  • webdoctors - Wednesday, August 14, 2024 - link

    First I misread and thought they sold mobileeye and was like wow that only got them $147M! Hopefully they dont need to start a gofundMe and can survive...
  • ballsystemlord - Wednesday, August 14, 2024 - link

    Intel sells Arm. Next it sells it's Leg. Then, it's first born... ;)
  • 529th - Thursday, August 15, 2024 - link

    lol
  • ABR - Thursday, August 15, 2024 - link

    Hard to believe Intel can be hard up for cash given how it literally printed money (at >60% margins) for so many years.
  • amschroeder55 - Thursday, August 15, 2024 - link

    It isn't. Intel has something like 20B cash on hand still. Even if it loses 4B a year, it has a 5 year ramp before even touching debt or equity sales, which probably would give it infinite money.

    Intel is the boeing of semiconductors in the US, with all the pros and cons involved.
  • sharath.naik - Thursday, August 15, 2024 - link

    Wow, how much trouble they really are in? This cannot just be some slow down of sales, this looks a combination of mass migration to AMD and the CPUs getting so powerful that the demand for quantity has collapsed. You can run most IT workload on a single machine these days.
  • mukiex - Thursday, August 15, 2024 - link

    Anyone remember when Intel was too big to fail? They bragged about having more people in software than AMD's entire employee count, and they couldn't put together a functioning graphics driver.

    "Oh no, they outsourced that driver to some Russian driver tea-" I mean, that pretty much guarantees they didn't have enough competent software developers to build it then, because we didn't exactly get a Plan B afterwards.
  • Sivar - Thursday, August 15, 2024 - link

    To be fair, AMD can't put together a functioning graphics driver, either.
  • ballsystemlord - Thursday, August 15, 2024 - link

    Nvidia can, but it will cost you an Arm to buy their GPUs. ;)
  • bananaforscale - Thursday, August 15, 2024 - link

    Technically it won't, after all Nvidia tried to acquire ARM but was denied. ;P

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