Friday, October 3, 2025
Intel Is Still in Early Talks With AMD For a Foundry Deal, Which Could Involve The Use of 18A & 14A
There are both political and business implications to a potential AMD-Intel deal, and we'll talk about the more significant factor first. We know that President Trump has been 'micromanaging' Intel ever since the administration took a stake in the company, which means that they are working directly with firms to put the American chipmaker back on track. Firms like NVIDIA, Apple, and AMD know that any potential partnership with Intel could put them in a 'position of leverage' and in President Trump's 'good books' when it comes to negotiating with the USG on any future matter.
On a product level, AMD has also collaborated with Intel in the past, most notably in 2018 with the Kaby Lake-G lineup, where Team Red introduced its Radeon RX Vega GPU chiplets onto Intel's Kaby Lake architecture. The partnership between the two does show that there's room for a deal ahead as well; however, it's still uncertain how the collaboration could pan out. If we speculate on 'reasonable' grounds, AMD could be ready to shift some of its CPU production towards Intel, maybe the EPYC Venice CPUs on the 18A node, since we know that Team Red has used TSMC's N2 for it.
Of course, the 'rumors' of investments around Intel are heavily dependent on how the 18A node turns out, since if Team Blue manages to nail the launch in terms of yield rates, PPA, and other factors, then the reluctance of Big Tech to pivot away from TSMC will reduce significantly. And since TSMC is in a tough spot 'politically' for now, Intel could very well see the industry spotlight for its foundry services.There are both political and business implications to a potential AMD-Intel deal, and we'll talk about the more significant factor first. We know that President Trump has been 'micromanaging' Intel ever since the administration took a stake in the company, which means that they are working directly with firms to put the American chipmaker back on track. Firms like NVIDIA, Apple, and AMD know that any potential partnership with Intel could put them in a 'position of leverage' and in President Trump's 'good books' when it comes to negotiating with the USG on any future matter.
On a product level, AMD has also collaborated with Intel in the past, most notably in 2018 with the Kaby Lake-G lineup, where Team Red introduced its Radeon RX Vega GPU chiplets onto Intel's Kaby Lake architecture. The partnership between the two does show that there's room for a deal ahead as well; however, it's still uncertain how the collaboration could pan out. If we speculate on 'reasonable' grounds, AMD could be ready to shift some of its CPU production towards Intel, maybe the EPYC Venice CPUs on the 18A node, since we know that Team Red has used TSMC's N2 for it.
By: DocMemory Copyright © 2023 CST, Inc. All Rights Reserved
|