
Shares of Intel (INTC) rebounded on Tuesday after a bruising multi-day selloff, as analysts turned increasingly optimistic about the chipmaker’s long-term positioning in artificial intelligence infrastructure and server processors.
Intel stock rose more than 2% on Tuesday, snapping a five-session losing streak that had dragged shares down roughly 16% over the previous week.
The rebound came after several Wall Street firms raised price targets and pointed to improving prospects in the growing AI-driven server CPU market.
The gains offered some relief to investors after a volatile stretch for semiconductor stocks, which have faced increasing pressure amid concerns about lofty valuations following the sector’s explosive rally earlier this year.
Despite the recent decline, Intel shares remain sharply higher year to date after surging more than 180% in 2026.
Analysts see long-term AI opportunity
Investor sentiment improved after Melius Research analyst Benjamin Reitzes reiterated a Buy rating on Intel and lifted his price target to $150 from $100.
The new target represents the highest among analysts currently covering the stock and implies potential upside of more than 40% from recent trading levels.
Other analysts also highlighted the growing role server processors could play as AI adoption expands beyond training models toward inference and agentic AI workloads.
Citi analyst Atif Malik raised his Intel price target to $130 from $95 after introducing a revised model for the server CPU market.
According to Citi estimates, the total addressable market for server CPUs could reach $132 billion by 2030.
Malik wrote, “We are constructive on CPU demand as the industry moves to inference and agentic AI which need more CPUs.”
Seaport analyst Jay Goldberg also argued that Intel may be better positioned than some semiconductor peers to justify its valuation over time.
“Some companies, such as AMD and Intel, have good prospects for growing into those numbers sooner, but for others, we think there is a good chance that reality is going to disappoint,” Goldberg wrote.
Benchmark analyst Cody Acree added that he came away from recent discussions with Intel more optimistic about the company’s future earnings power.
He reiterated a Buy rating and increased his price target to $140 from $105.
Intel pushes transition toward 18A processors
Alongside the improving AI narrative, Intel is also encouraging customers to shift toward its newer 18A manufacturing node as supply constraints affect parts of its existing Intel 7 processor lineup.
The Intel 7 platform currently powers many mainstream laptop and desktop processors, but supply has reportedly tightened as the company prioritizes production for server-related demand.
Intel said its newer 18A processors are “…built to ramp fast and at scale, bringing modern performance, efficiency, and AI ready features to everyday and commercial systems and giving our partners the ability to ship at high volume.”
The transition could reshape portions of the personal computer market, particularly budget laptop segments, as manufacturers adapt to potentially higher component costs and more premium system configurations.
Investors appeared encouraged that the company’s manufacturing roadmap may align more closely with accelerating AI-related demand.
Market share concerns and volatility remain
Despite Tuesday’s rebound, Intel continues facing competitive pressure within the semiconductor industry.
Last week, shares dropped sharply after a UBS report showed Intel losing share in the server CPU market.
According to the report, Intel’s server CPU market share declined to 54.9% during the first quarter, while rivals AMD and Arm gained ground.
The report raised concerns about Intel’s ability to defend its position in one of the industry’s most important growth markets.
The stock has also experienced unusually high volatility.
Intel shares have recorded dozens of moves greater than 5% over the past year as investors reassess the company’s long-term turnaround prospects.
Wall Street currently maintains a broadly neutral stance on the stock.
Based on recent analyst ratings, Intel carries a consensus “Hold” recommendation, even after its strong rally over the past year.
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