As the company gears up to report its first-quarter earnings, it's looking to build on current momentum.
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As the company gears up to report its first-quarter earnings, it's looking to build on current momentum.
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Intel (NasdaqGS:INTC) and Apple reached a preliminary agreement for Intel to manufacture chips for Apple. The agreement marks a breakthrough for Intel's foundry effort and involves active support from the White House. The deal highlights U.S. based chipmaking as an alternative to supply chains centered on Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing. Intel, traded as NasdaqGS:INTC, has been working to build a contract chip manufacturing business alongside its own processor lines. Apple is one of the...
The company is a well-oiled machine (pun intended).
Intel has sold a new customer on its domestic foundry push, the latest lifeline for a venture that engineered massive losses in the one-time semiconductor giant and led many industry analysts to believe that it would be abandoned or spun off. After months of speculation, the WSJ reported Friday ...
The leading chipmaker's business continues to grow at an impressive pace.
The U.S. economy added 115,000 jobs in April, the Labor Department said, far exceeding expectations. The unemployment rate stayed unchanged at 4.3%. Intel shares rose 14% after The Wall Street Journal reported that the chip maker struck a preliminary deal to supply chips to Apple.
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<body><p>STORY: :: Lisa Bernhard, Reuters</p><p>:: Ross Mayfield, Investment Strategist, Baird</p><p>The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq rallied to record highs on Friday, boosted by gains in semiconductor stocks, while a stronger-than-expected jobs report pointed to labor market resilience.</p><p>Speaking with Reuters' Lisa Bernhard, Mayfield said that with April's nonfarm payrolls data "building on last month's strong report... you start to feel like maybe the labor market is turning a corner."</p><p>Meanwhile, shares of Intel joined the chip rally late Friday, soaring as high as 19%, after the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday that the company had reached a preliminary deal to make some chips for Apple devices.</p><p>"I certainly wouldn't want to stand in front of this momentum-driven sector," Mayfield said of the recent chip rally. "In my mind, it can't be a bubble if earnings are keeping up with price."</p></body>
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Investing.com -- Wall Street has risen to new record highs on Friday, bouncing back from losses in the prior session, boosted by a jump in chip stocks and a stronger-than-expected April U.S. jobs report.