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#IntelandTexasInstrumentsSurge Intel & Texas #IntelandTexasInstrumentsSurge Instruments Surge: The AI Hardware Revolution Has Arrived
The semiconductor landscape witnessed an extraordinary rally in late April 2026 as two industry giants delivered blowout quarterly results that shattered Wall Street expectations and sent their stocks soaring to historic highs. Here is a detailed look at what happened, why it matters, and what it signals for the future of the AI hardware market.
🚀 The Surge in Numbers
Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) led the charge with its best single-day performance since 1987. On April 24, the chip giant's stock surged approximately 24% to close at a record **$82.54**, eclipsing its previous peak from the dot-com era over 25 years ago. The stock hit an intraday high of $85.22, pushing its market capitalization past $400 billion. With this jump, Intel's year-to-date gains exceeded 120%, capping a remarkable turnaround after years of struggles.
Texas Instruments (NASDAQ: TXN) delivered its best single-day gain since 2000, soaring 19% to an all-time closing high of $282.23 on April 23. The analog chipmaker’s stock has now climbed an impressive 63% year-to-date and more than 60% in 2026 alone.
📊 What Drove the Rally?
The catalyst for both companies was simple: earnings that crushed every expectation.
Intel’s Blowout Quarter
Intel’s fiscal Q1 2026 results, released after the close on April 23, stunned the market:
· Revenue: $13.6 billion, up approximately 7% year-over-year and comfortably above the $12.36 billion consensus forecast
· Adjusted EPS: $0.29, demolishing Wall Street’s modest $0.01 projection
· Adjusted net income: surged 156% to $1.5 billion
· Q2 guidance: revenue projected at $13.8–14.8 billion, far exceeding analyst estimates of $13.03 billion
The star performer was Intel’s Data Center and AI (DCAI) division, which generated $5.1 billion in revenue — a 22% year-over-year increase and well above the $4.41 billion Wall Street projected. CEO Lip-Bu Tan described CPU demand for AI applications as “unprecedented”.
A Remarkable Turnaround
“Everyone is starting to direct orders to Intel, and I think we are in the early days,” said Great Hill Capital Chairman Thomas Hayes, an Intel investor, on Bloomberg Television. “This has gone from despondency to euphoria in a very short period of time”.
The company’s transformation under CEO Lip-Bu Tan has gained momentum. After missing out on the early stages of the AI boom driven by NVIDIA’s GPUs, Intel is now perfectly positioned for the next wave: agentic AI, which relies heavily on central processing units (CPUs) rather than graphics chips. As Tan explained on the earnings call, “The next wave of AI will bring intelligence closer to the end user, moving from foundational models to inference to agentic”.
The recovery is so robust that Intel reportedly sold CPUs it had previously written off due to unexpectedly strong AI inference demand. The company has also raised PC CPU prices in March and server CPU prices in April, with another potential 8–10% increase expected later this year.
Major Partnerships Validating the Turnaround
Intel secured multiple significant contracts during Q1, including a collaboration with Elon Musk on the Terafab project to manufacture chips for SpaceX, xAI, and Tesla. Tesla’s selection of Intel’s 14A manufacturing process represents significant validation of its foundry operations. Additionally, Intel extended its partnership with Google, with Xeon processors designated to support AI and inference applications.
The U.S. Government’s Massive Unrealized Gain
One notable beneficiary of Intel’s surge was the U.S. government. Under an unconventional deal brokered by the White House in August 2025, the government acquired an Intel stake worth approximately $8.9 billion through CHIPS Act support. That holding has now grown roughly fourfold to around $36 billion, representing an unrealized gain approaching $30 billion.
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Texas Instruments: The Analog Chip Powerhouse
Texas Instruments’s Q1 2026 results were equally impressive:
· Revenue: $4.83 billion, up 19% year-over-year and exceeding the $4.53 billion consensus
· EPS: $1.68, beating estimates of $1.27
· Analog segment revenue: rose 22% to $3.92 billion
· Operating profit: jumped 37% to $1.81 billion
The most eye-catching figure came from the data center segment, where revenue increased approximately 90% year-over-year. The industrial unit also grew 30% as the cycle recovery gained steam.
Q2 guidance reinforced the momentum: $5.0–5.4 billion in revenue (midpoint representing 17% growth) with EPS of $1.77–2.05, both above Wall Street projections.
Why Texas Instruments Matters for AI Infrastructure
While Texas Instruments doesn’t make the advanced processors that grab headlines, its analog chips are indispensable for AI data center construction. The company’s products handle power management, signal conversion, and cooling — essential components that enable GPUs and other advanced chips to function. The simple reality is that after securing GPUs and high-bandwidth memory, the next step in building data centers requires Texas Instruments’s components. With hyperscalers like Meta and Amazon constructing data centers at a breakneck pace, TI’s position as a “picks-and-shovels” player in the AI infrastructure buildout has become increasingly valuable.
CEO Haviv Ilan expressed confidence in the company’s capacity to meet surging demand. “We are prepared. If the market wants to grow at the same rate as Q1 — we mentioned 19% year over year — we are ready. If it wants to accelerate, we are ready as well”.
Analyst Upgrades and Price Targets
Wall Street responded with a wave of upgrades. Bank of America’s Vivek Arya upgraded Texas Instruments from Neutral to Buy, raising the price target from $235 to $320. Baird boosted its target from $225 to $300, while Rosenblatt increased its target from $240 to $330. Overall, at least five firms raised their price targets following the earnings release.
🌊 Sector-Wide AI Rally
The rallies of Intel and Texas Instruments were not isolated events. They helped ignite a broader semiconductor surge that lifted the entire sector to unprecedented levels.
The Philadelphia SE Semiconductor Index (SOX) climbed 2.5% to an all-time high and extended its record-breaking streak of consecutive daily gains to 18 sessions. The index has gained more than 42% so far in 2026.
Other chipmakers benefited from the positive sentiment:
· Advanced Micro Devices (AMD): jumped nearly 14%
· Arm Holdings: climbed approximately 15%
· NVIDIA: rose 4.32% to close at $208.27, pushing its market cap back above the $5 trillion mark
· Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM ADR): gained 5.17%
“The AI build-out race is still on. We are seeing solid results, especially for semiconductors, and no sign that demand for AI is slowing down,” said Angelo Kourkafas, senior global investment strategist at Edward Jones.
💡 Key Takeaways for Investors
For Intel: The company’s dramatic turnaround shows that CPU demand driven by AI inference and agentic AI is real and accelerating. However, at roughly 90 times forward earnings, Intel’s valuation is historically high — significantly above AMD’s 37x and NVIDIA’s 22x multiples. Investors should watch whether the company can continue executing on its foundry ambitions, which have yet to make meaningful contributions to the bottom line.
For Texas Instruments: With a P/E multiple exceeding 48x, the market is clearly pricing in substantial future growth expectations. The company’s analog edge in the AI infrastructure buildout appears durable, and its $60 billion investment in three new U.S. fabrication plants positions it well for reshoring tailwinds. That said, some analysts note that “a lot of optimism is already priced in”.
For the Semiconductor Sector: The rallies of Intel and Texas Instruments signal that AI infrastructure investment is broadening beyond just GPU manufacturers. As one analyst noted, “The AI build-out race is still on”. The semiconductor industry is expected to record first-quarter earnings growth of 104.9%, far exceeding the broader S&P 500 information technology sector’s projected 46.2% growth.
👁️ The Bigger Picture
What these two rallies reveal is a fundamental shift in the AI investment landscape. While NVIDIA continues to dominate AI training, the next phase of the AI revolution — deploying AI agents, expanding inference capabilities, and building out physical AI infrastructure — is creating tailwinds across the entire semiconductor ecosystem.
Jim Cramer summed up the sentiment: “The paranoid Intel is back!”. For Texas Instruments, the story is equally compelling: a company long viewed as peripheral to AI has become an indispensable component of the $1 trillion infrastructure buildout.
As technology giants continue pouring hundreds of billions into AI capital expenditures, semiconductor companies at every layer of the stack — from CPUs to analog chips — stand to benefit. The rallies of Intel and Texas Instruments in late April 2026 may well be remembered as a turning point where the AI revolution truly became a broad-based hardware phenomenon 🔌💻⚡.