Intel earnings preview: options pricing signals 'sell the news' reaction

Intel earnings preview: options pricing signals 'sell the news' reaction
Wajeeh Khan
23 Apr 2026, 01:37 AM

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INTC downside hedge

Buy put protection on Intel using near-dated puts expiring right after earnings (e.g., April 24). Options positioning already shows bearish skew (put-to-call ~1.13) and the market is paying for downside. This trade monetizes the gap risk and post-earnings volatility even if the move is driven by guidance details rather than headline revenue/eps.

Key Risk: The stock rallies sharply on upside guidance and the implied volatility collapses after earnings, crushing put values.

INTC earnings pullback

Sell Intel (NYSE: INTC) into/after Q1. The stock is up ~60% in a month, RSI is in the low 70s (overbought), and options are pricing a ~9% “sell the news” drop. With a triple-digit P/E and only a 2% revenue decline expected, any guidance wobble or margin/capex disappointment will likely trigger fast de-risking.

Key Risk: Intel delivers clear margin stability and strong forward guidance that proves the 18A ramp won’t hurt profitability or cash flow.

  • Intel is scheduled to report its Q1 earnings on April 23rd (after the bell).
  • Options traders expect INTC shares to sell-off after earnings tomorrow.
  • Intel stock is currently up some 60% versus the start of this month.

Intel (NYSE: INTC) has ran up notably into its Q1 earnings on April 23rd, with the semiconductor stock currently up an exciting 60% versus the start of this month.

Consensus is for INTC to post $12.42 billion in revenue – representing a slight 2.2% decline on a year-over-year basis. Still, earnings are seen coming in at 2 cents a share, up a remarkable 90%.

Still, options traders are positioned for a “sell the news” reaction in Intel stock this week, betting the chipmaker’s valuation has outpaced its fundamental recovery.

Where options data suggests Intel stock is headed

According to Barchart, the put-to-call ratio on contracts expiring April 24th sits at 1.13 currently – signaling a strong bearish skew.

The lower price on those options contracts at about $60 suggests INTC shares could sink as much as 9% right after the company’s Q1 earnings release.

Basically, the derivatives market seems to believe that any minor hiccup, particularly in terms of future guidance, could trigger a sharp sell-off in Intel through the end of this week.

Compounding this technical pressure is the firm’s relative strength index (RSI) – which has drifted into the low 70s recently.

Such “overbought” conditions historically indicate that the stock is due for some consolidation or even a sharp pullback as profit-takers exit.

What to look for in Intel’s Q1 earnings

Intel’s transition to an “engineering-first” culture under CEO Lip-Bu Tan has secured high-profile validation – most notably through the Terafab project with Elon Musk and deepened ties with Google.

But the market remains skeptical of the financial payoff. Investors are no longer just looking for “names” on a list; they are hunting for proof of yield and margin stability.

If Q1 earnings report reveals that the 18A process ramp is actually cannibalizing margins or if the Data Center and AI (DCAI) segment shows further erosion to competitors, the recent surge in Intel shares will be viewed as premature.

For INTC to sustain its meteoric gains, Tan must move beyond partnerships and demonstrate that the company can actually produce these chips at a scale that stops the multi-billion dollar bleeding in the foundry segment.

What’s the consensus rating on INTC shares

Investors are recommended caution in playing INTC stock also because its triple-digit P/E multiple leaves zero room for error.

Trading at a premium to its historical averages, Intel is being priced as a “perfected turnaround” story, yet its financials still reflect a company in the middle of a costly and risky transition.

In particular, investors fear the massive capital expenditure required to compete with the likes of TSMC will continue to weigh on the firm’s free cash flow for years.

And Wall Street seems to agree, as evidenced in its consensus “hold” rating on INTC.

Analysts currently have a mean price target of $53 on the semiconductor firm, indicating potential “downside” of about 20% from here.