
Intel gets $2b lifeline in the form of SoftBank equity investment
The equity investment, announced by the two companies Monday, is a lifeline for the once-iconic US chipmaker which has struggled to compete after years of management blunders that left it with virtually no foothold in the booming artificial intelligence chip industry.
It will make SoftBank a top-10 shareholder of Intel and add to the Japanese tech investor's ambitious bet on artificial intelligence that includes the $500 billion Stargate US data center project.
The deal follows media reports last week that the US government may buy a stake in Intel, after a meeting between new CEO Lip-Bu Tan and President Donald Trump that was sparked by the President's demand for Tan's resignation over his ties to Chinese firms.
SoftBank's decision to invest in Intel is not connected to Trump, a person familiar with the matter told Reuters. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
"This strategic investment reflects our belief that advanced semiconductor manufacturing and supply will further expand in the United States, with Intel playing a critical role," SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son said in a statement.
It will pay $23 per Intel share, a slight discount to Monday's closing price of $23.66.
SoftBank's investment will come via a primary issuance of common stock by Intel, and, based on the US company's market capitalization at close of trading on Monday, represent an equity stake of just under 2 percent, an Intel spokesperson said.
The Japanese company would become the sixth-largest investor in Intel, according to LSEG data.
SoftBank shares dropped more than 5 percent Tuesday following the announcement, while Intel surged 5.6 percent in after-market hours trading.
The Japanese company will only take an equity stake in Intel and will neither seek a board seat nor commit to buying Intel's chips, the person familiar with the matter said.
Intel has struggled financially and recorded an annual loss of $18.8 billion in 2024, its first such loss since 1986, as it grapples with multiple challenges.
Its longtime rival AMD has been gaining share in Intel's mainstay personal computer and server semiconductor markets, while its ambitious and costly plan for a chip contracting business that rivals that of Taiwan's TSMC has failed to take off.
The company is now considering a significant change to its contract chip manufacturing business to win major customers, Reuters reported last month, in a potentially expensive shift from its previous strategies.
"Intel's dual role as designer and manufacturer/fabricator uniquely positions it as potentially the best platform in the US to compete with TSMC," said Charu Chanana, chief investment strategist at Saxo.
Bloomberg News reported earlier Monday that the US government is in talks to take a 10 percent stake in Intel.
SoftBank declined to provide more details on the Intel investment when asked to comment by Reuters.
The Intel funding is the latest in the Japanese company's run of mammoth investment announcements in 2025, which include committing $30 billion to ChatGPT maker OpenAI as well as leading the financing for Stargate.
On Monday Taiwan's Foxconn said it plans to manufacture data center equipment with SoftBank at the Taiwanese firm's former electric vehicle factory in Ohio as part of the Stargate project. (Reuters)

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Korea Herald
12 hours ago
- Korea Herald
AW Education International Marks 10 Years with Milestone Gala and Vision for the Future
BEIJING, Aug. 20, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- AW Education International proudly celebrated its 10th anniversary at the 2024–2025 Annual Gala, marking a decade of growth, achievement, and global impact. Held under the inspiring theme "Together for Dreams, A Decade of Promise," the event brought together staff, partners, students, and alumni to honor the company's remarkable journey and look ahead to an ambitious future in international education. A Decade of Growth: From Vision to Industry Leader Building on more than 23 years of expertise in international education, AW Education International has grown from a fledgling start-up to a trusted global education brand. Over the past ten years, the company has evolved from offering single-service solutions to building a comprehensive international education ecosystem — encompassing early education, study abroad guidance, application services, cultural exchange, identity planning, and legacy education. Guided by its mission to enhance Chinese students' global competence, AW Education International has expanded its presence to more than 20 countries and regions, partnering with leading universities worldwide. This extensive network has made the company a vital bridge between Chinese students and global education resources, earning the trust of families and partners alike. Proven Success: Outstanding Admissions Results AW Education International's commitment to quality is reflected in its impressive results. For the 2025 admissions season alone, students received thousands of offers from top universities worldwide. This includes over 2,400 offers from U.S. Ivy League schools, more than 760 offers from the UK's G5 universities — including Oxford and Cambridge — and 1,400 offers from leading universities in Singapore and Hong Kong SAR, China, such as the National University of Singapore and the University of Hong Kong. Behind these achievements is a team of seasoned consultants who provide expert, personalized guidance. Every offer stands as proof of AW Education International's professional excellence and its decade-long dedication to empowering students for global success. The People Behind the Success The celebration also honored the people who have shaped AW Education International's journey. Awards recognized the dedication of its very first employee, who has been with the company for a full decade, as well as teams and individuals who embody its core values of teamwork, resilience, and client focus — qualities that have become the foundation of AW Education International's strength. The event also paid tribute to partners and admissions officers who have worked closely with AW Education International to expand opportunities for students. This mutual trust and collaboration have been essential to the company's sustained growth. Looking Ahead: The Next Chapter For AW Education International, the 10-year milestone marks both a celebration and a starting point. The company remains committed to its role as a one-stop international education service platform for elite families, pursuing its "International Education + Insurance," "International Education + Finance," and "International Education + Legacy" strategies. In the years ahead, AW Education International will continue to integrate global education resources, enhance service systems, and focus on supporting students throughout their educational journey — empowering more Chinese students to succeed on the global stage. The next decade will bring fresh innovations, stronger partnerships, and an enduring commitment to excellence in international education.


Korea Herald
17 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Westinghouse deal tensions loom over Korea-US summit
Controversial KHNP agreement faces backlash at home as leaders prepare to discuss nuclear energy cooperation Escalating tensions over a deal between South Korea's state-run energy firms and US company Westinghouse are complicating the agenda for the upcoming Korea-US summit, where nuclear energy cooperation is expected to take center stage. South Korean President Lee Jae Myung and US President Donald Trump are scheduled to meet in Washington next Monday for their summit, with officials saying nuclear partnership will be high on the agenda. According to a local media report on Wednesday, state-run Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power and Westinghouse, the two companies at the heart of the controversy, are preparing to form a joint venture to enter the US nuclear reactor market on the occasion of the upcoming summit. The report explained that since KHNP cannot independently access the US market, it plans to enter through a partnership with the American firm while handling most of the construction work. Nuclear energy's inclusion on the summit agenda was widely expected, given that the sector was part of South Korea's $200 billion investment pledge in the US under the tariff deal announced last month. President Trump has vowed to expand US nuclear energy capacity from 97 gigawatts to 400 gigawatts by 2050. Achieving this target would require constructing approximately 300 new 1,000-megawatt reactors. Industry observers view the US as eyeing Korean companies' technological expertise and construction capabilities to meet this goal. The plan comes amid controversy over a separate agreement that KHNP and Korea Electric Power Corp. struck with Westinghouse in January, sparking worries about potential summit implications. The settlement resolved Westinghouse's claims that KHNP had violated its intellectual property rights by using licensed Westinghouse technology in the development of its APR 1000 and 1400 nuclear reactor designs. The deal cleared the way for a KHNP-led consortium to sign an estimated 26 trillion won ($18.58 billion) contract in June to build two nuclear reactors in the Czech Republic. But after details of the settlement came to light on Monday following another local media report, the state-run company came under fire for agreeing to lopsided conditions to reach a swift deal, while burdening itself with hefty financial commitments. According to the agreement, KHNP agreed to sign contracts for goods and services worth $650 million with Westinghouse for each export of a single nuclear reactor, and to pay an additional $175 million per reactor in technology licensing fees. The 50-year deal also contains a provision requiring Westinghouse to verify the technical independence of Korean companies before they can bid on overseas nuclear reactor projects, including small modular reactors. It also restricted KHNP to pursuing nuclear projects in only 12 designated countries -- including the Philippines, Vietnam, Kazakhstan, Morocco, Egypt, Brazil, Argentina, Jordan, Turkey, UAE, Saudi Arabia and South Africa -- while barring it from new deals in North America, Britain, Japan, Ukraine and the EU, except for the Czech Republic. Lawmakers blamed KHNP for bowing to US pressure to secure the Czech deal. 'It has been confirmed that the Yoon Suk Yeol government signed an unfair contract with Westinghouse to break the deadlock in the Czech project,' said Rep. Han Jeong-ae of the ruling Democratic Party of Korea at the National Assembly on Tuesday. Amid the controversy, KHNP CEO Whang Joo-ho on Tuesday said the deal terms remain within acceptable limits, but he declined to provide detailed answers, citing confidentiality obligations. 'While I cannot say (Westinghouse's demands) are justified, they are something tolerable enough for us to endure and still generate profit,' Whang said at the National Assembly. Meanwhile, opposition People Power Party lawmakers also stressed that just before the Korea-US summit, it may not serve the national interest for the parliament to directly confront the Westinghouse issue. 'Westinghouse may hold the original technology, but it lacks the construction capacity to independently build reactors, which means Korean companies are likely to handle the construction,' said an industry insider on condition of anonymity. 'Even if the deal is viewed as unfavorable, I believe it was inevitable if Korean companies are going to expand their overseas nuclear businesses.' Amid growing backlash, South Korea's presidential office has ordered the Industry Ministry to investigate the deal to verify that the negotiations and contract process were carried out based on laws and regulations and in accordance with principles and procedures.


Korea Herald
17 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Samsung, TSMC face subsidy-for-shares dilemma under Trump plan
Critics argue Trump's equity demand is no subsidy but an attempt at ownership of private companies Washington is reviewing options to acquire equity stakes in foreign chipmakers such as Samsung Electronics and TSMC in return for the federal subsidies they are receiving to build factories in the US, industry sources said Wednesday. The idea has rattled the industry, with analysts dismissing it as 'unrealistic,' saying it reflects US President Donald Trump's intent to walk back on grants pledged under the former Biden administration. US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick on Tuesday openly floated the idea in reference to Intel, as the White House reportedly weighs options such as taking a 10 percent stake in the company. 'We should get an equity stake for our money,' Lutnick told CNBC, referring to Intel. 'So we'll deliver the money, which was already committed under the Biden administration, and we'll get equity in return.' Citing sources familiar with the matter, Reuters reported that Lutnick is exploring applying the same approach to other chipmakers, including Samsung. Lutnick argued that the Biden administration 'literally was giving Intel money for free, and giving TSMC money for free,' underscoring the Trump administration's critical stance on federal grants. The CHIPS and Science Act, legislated under the Biden administration, pledged subsidies to global chipmakers building plants in the US as part of a wider effort to reshore semiconductor manufacturing. 'Donald Trump turns that into saying, 'Hey, we want equity for the money. If we're going to give you the money, we want a piece of the action,'' Lutnick said, adding that any potential arrangement would not give the government governance rights in Intel. Intel has said it finalized a nearly $8 billion grant under the CHIPS and Science Act to build its factories, while TSMC was awarded $6.6 billion to expand chip production at its Arizona facilities. Samsung Electronics, which is building a $37 billion advanced chip plant in Taylor, Texas, secured a $4.75 billion subsidy package under the Biden administration last year. SK hynix is also set to begin construction of a $3.87 billion advanced packaging plant for AI memory in West Lafayette, Indiana, in the second half of this year. 'It's an unreasonable idea. The US government is effectively demanding equity in private companies — not state-run firms or startups, but already well-established foreign businesses like Samsung and TSMC. That is not a subsidy anymore, it is ownership,' said Kim Yang-paeng, a senior researcher at the Korea Institute for Industrial Economics and Trade. According to Kim, the plan reflects Trump's long-standing view that subsidies are a 'waste' and should not be handed out. 'What Washington is really saying is it wants equity equal to the subsidies, which means it's no longer a subsidy,' he said. 'US firms might accept that since it is their own government, but Samsung or TSMC will not.' In Intel's case, the Trump administration's plan to acquire a 10 percent stake is seen as roughly equivalent to the $7.86 billion in subsidies the company is set to receive, compared with its market capitalization of $110.8 billion. If applied to Samsung, the approach would translate into about a 1.6 percent stake, based on the $4.75 billion subsidy against its 414 trillion won market capitalization as of Wednesday. As the Korean chip giant is listed on the domestic stock market, Washington may instead target stakes in its US subsidiaries, such as Samsung Semiconductor and Samsung Austin Semiconductor, industry experts said.