Intel stock fell more than 4% in premarket trading on Friday, hitting $111.27, as a wave of profit-taking hit the semiconductor sector following a historic run.
Intel Corporation, INTC
Advanced Micro Devices dropped 3.4% and Arm Holdings fell 4.4% in the same session. All three stocks have surged in recent months on expectations that AI infrastructure buildout would drive demand for their chips.
Intel has risen more than fivefold over the past 12 months, making it a standout performer — but that kind of run tends to attract scrutiny.
UBS analyst Michel Lerner, head of HOLT, issued a note warning that markets may be getting ahead of themselves. “There is a risk that markets are running too hot on the AI story,” Lerner wrote. He described April’s U.S. stock price move as a 2.8 standard deviation event over the last 25 years.
The firm noted that AI semiconductor stocks are on track for an average 30% cash flow return on investment (CFROI) this year. That sounds great — until you look at history. Only one in five companies has managed to sustain that level a decade after first achieving it.
“Markets are assuming that the lifecycle of AI firms is different to all other companies historically and that they are immune to normal competitive dynamics,” Lerner wrote.
Beyond the macro warning, Intel has a company-specific problem. A new UBS report confirmed Intel is losing server CPU market share — and its rivals are the ones picking it up.
In Q1 2026, Intel held 54.9% of the server CPU market, down 370 basis points from the prior quarter. AMD climbed 230 basis points to 27.4%, while Arm gained 140 basis points to reach 17.7%.
Year-over-year, the picture is starker. Intel shed 950 basis points. AMD gained 330 basis points. Arm gained 620 basis points. That’s not a one-quarter blip — it’s a trend.
The data center AI market is growing, but Intel is capturing less of it with each passing quarter.
Not everything in the report was negative for Intel. UBS highlighted the company’s upcoming Coral Rapids chips as a potential catalyst.
The bank also noted Intel could “benefit on the PC side as locally run agentic workloads drive demand over the medium term.” In other words, as AI moves onto personal devices, Intel’s PC-oriented architecture could get a second look.
Still, the overall direction of the server market is clear. AMD and Arm have momentum, and Intel will need a strong product response to reverse the trend.
As of Friday morning, Intel was trading at $108.48, down 6.43% on the day.
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