Intel Names Lip-Bu Tan as New CEO Amid Turnaround Efforts

Intel, a fallen Silicon Valley icon trying to restore its reputation as America’s most prominent semiconductor company, has named Lip-Bu Tan, an experienced business and technology leader, as its new chief executive.Mr.Tan, 65, will be responsible for reviving the fortunes of a chip-making company that has fallen from grace.
Once one of the best-known names in technology, the semiconductor giant has been hobbled in recent years by its struggles to innovate and failure to claim a share of the market for chips used in smartphones and artificial intelligence.Intel’s problems became so pronounced that last year it ousted its chief executive, Patrick Gelsinger, and cut 15,000 jobs.The company’s share price has fallen 54 percent over the past year.The company’s woes have alarmed the U.S.
government, where lawmakers have been trying to rebuild the chips industry after the pandemic created a global shortage that forced U.S.auto factories to shutter.
Under the CHIPS Act, a bipartisan law, Intel was awarded $8.5 billion in federal funding to build plants in Arizona, Ohio and New Mexico.But its business challenges have raised questions about its ability to complete those projects.Earlier this year, the Trump administration began meeting with Intel’s leadership about how to restore its business, one of the country’s last in advanced semiconductor manufacturing.
One proposal was to have its rival, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, the world’s largest chipmaker, assume operations for Intel’s ailing manufacturing business.Frank Yeary, Intel’s chairman, was open to that idea, The New York Times has previously reported.Now, it will be up to Mr.
Tan to direct Intel’s future.The company is one of the last in the world that still both designs and manufactures semiconductors.
Its former board members and others in the industry have been calling for the company to split those businesses apart.We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please ...