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Intel stock sinks on company-specific concerns, AMD caught in sector-wide sell-off

Intel stock sinks on company-specific concerns, AMD caught in sector-wide sell-off
Wajeeh Khan
May 15, 2026, 12:05 PM

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INTC short

Sell Intel (INTC). The news is a double hit: server CPU share collapsing to 54.9% and the Apple foundry partnership likely shrinking to legacy, lower-end components (not flagship 2nm mobile). With INTC the highest-beta semis name, “first in, first out” de-risking should keep pressure on the stock even if the sector stabilizes. Key catalyst is multiple compression after UBS flags bubble-like valuation outliers.

Key Risk: Intel’s foundry/Apple scope proves larger than feared and server share stabilizes faster than expected, stopping the multiple reset.

AMD short

Sell AMD (AMD). Even though it’s an AI favorite, the setup is sector-wide de-risking plus a direct margin threat: UBS warns the AI server gold rush is hyper-competitive as Arm-based chips and custom silicon gain traction, which can force AMD to re-rate from its premium multiple. Add the macro squeeze—higher yields and sticky-inflation fears—hurting capital-intensive chip demand and risk appetite.

Key Risk: AMD demonstrates strong AI server momentum and margin resilience (beat/raise plus guidance) that offsets macro and competitive pressure.

  • Intel stock sinks as UBS reveals a decline in its server CPU market share.
  • AMD shares are also losing amidst a macro-driven sell-off in semi names.
  • Both Intel and AMD remain up sharply versus their year-to-date lows.

Shares of Intel (INTC) and Advanced Micro Devices AMD are bleeding red this morning amidst a broader macro-driven sell-off across the US semiconductor names.

Investors seem to be taking profit following parabolic multi-week rallies that have seen valuations soar to historic extremes.

In fact, UBS analysts labeled current multiples as “statistical outliers” – flashing bubble-like signals in a research note today.

Plus, this mass exit is being exacerbated by defensive positioning ahead of Nvidia’s “high-stakes” quarterly results scheduled to be revealed on May 20.

With a 95% probability of a “beat and raise” already priced into the market, investors are choosing to de-risk across the entire AI complex rather than gamble on further upside.

Why AMD stock is slipping today

While AMD remains a favourite of the AI revolution, it’s currently buckling under a surge of macro volatility.

The 10-year Treasury yield climbed to a new high on Friday, draining liquidity from high-growth tech stocks whose future earnings are now being discounted at a higher rate.

Compounding this “risk-off” sentiment are escalating Middle East tensions involving Iran – which have spiked Brent crude prices and revived fears of “sticky” inflation.

Consequently, the futures market is now pricing in higher odds of a Fed “rate hike” rather than the long-awaited cut, a scenario that is toxic for capital-intensive industries like chip manufacturing.

Adding fuel to the fire on May 15 is a new report from UBS, warning that the AI server gold rush is entering a hyper-competitive phase.

As Arm-based chips and custom silicon gain traction, analysts fear the margins for traditional x86 CPU players could be squeezed, forcing a re-evaluation of AMD shares’ premium multiple.

Why Intel shares are crumbling today

Beyond the aforementioned macroeconomic headwinds, Intel stock is also seeing pressure because of a more localized catastrophe.

UBS data reveals a staggering blow to its core business: Intel’s server CPU market share has tanked to 54.9%, marking a brutal sequential decline of 370 basis points.

The losses aren’t just in the data center; whispers in the valley suggest that INTC’s much-vaunted foundry partnership with Apple is significantly smaller in scope than investors had hoped. 

Reports now indicate the deal may be restricted to legacy, lower-end components only, rather than flagship 2nm mobile processors.

This has left Intel vulnerable, as it has been the highest-beta name in the semiconductor group this year.

Because of this massive overextension, INTC is leading the pullback in semiconductor names – as the “first in, first out” mentality takes hold among institutional investors looking to protect year-to-date gains.

At the time of writing, Wall Street firms have a consensus “hold” rating on Intel, with a mean price target of just $83, signaling potential downside of another 23% from here.