Intel stock jumped sharply after the chipmaker delivered a first-quarter earnings report that came in ahead of Wall Street expectations and paired that with stronger-than-expected guidance for the current quarter. The move mattered not only because Intel beat consensus on headline numbers, but also because its Client Computing and Data Center & AI businesses both outperformed analyst forecasts.
For investors following the semiconductor sector, this report offered a clearer look at where Intel’s recovery story is gaining traction. Revenue growth returned, adjusted profitability improved, and management pointed to rising demand tied to AI workloads, especially for CPUs and advanced packaging. That combination helps explain why the market reacted so strongly after the close.
Intel beat Wall Street on revenue, adjusted EPS, and guidance
Intel reported first-quarter 2026 revenue of about $13.6 billion, up 7% year over year. On a non-GAAP basis, the company posted earnings per share of $0.29, up from $0.13 a year earlier. Those figures topped Wall Street expectations, which had been centered around roughly $12.4 billion in revenue and close to breakeven to low-single-digit cents in adjusted EPS.
The report was particularly notable because Intel had guided in January for first-quarter revenue of $11.7 billion to $12.7 billion and non-GAAP EPS of $0.00. Instead, the company exceeded even the high end of that earlier revenue range and delivered a much stronger profit result than its own starting outlook implied.
Intel’s second-quarter outlook also came in above expectations. The company guided for revenue of $13.8 billion to $14.8 billion and non-GAAP EPS of $0.20, with non-GAAP gross margin projected at 39.0%. Reuters reported that Wall Street had been looking for about $13.07 billion in second-quarter revenue, making Intel’s forecast a meaningful step above consensus.
That guidance matters because markets often react less to the quarter that just ended and more to what management says comes next. In Intel’s case, the forward outlook suggested that the first-quarter beat was not just a one-off result.
The biggest drivers were PCs and Data Center & AI
A major reason Intel impressed investors was that the strength was not limited to one area. The Client Computing Group, Intel’s PC-focused business, generated roughly $7.7 billion in revenue in the quarter, up 1% year over year. Seeking Alpha’s report said that result was above the roughly $7.1 billion analysts had expected.
The more closely watched figure may have been Data Center and AI revenue, which reached about $5.1 billion, up 22% from the year-earlier period. That was also ahead of expectations; Reuters said analysts had been looking for about $4.41 billion. For a company trying to prove it can stay relevant in an AI-driven semiconductor market, that segment outperformance was one of the most important data points in the release.
Intel’s total Intel Products revenue came in at $12.8 billion, up 9%, while Intel Foundry posted $5.4 billion in revenue, up 16%. Foundry remains a complicated part of the investment story because the segment is still absorbing large costs, but the top-line growth indicates activity is increasing across Intel’s manufacturing footprint.
Management tied some of the momentum to AI infrastructure trends. CEO Lip-Bu Tan said the next phase of AI is shifting toward inference and agentic systems, which is increasing demand for Intel CPUs, wafers, and advanced packaging. CFO David Zinsner also pointed to growing demand for silicon and disciplined execution to expand supply. Those comments suggest Intel sees room to benefit from AI demand even in a market where Nvidia remains dominant in GPUs.
Why Intel stock reacted so strongly
The immediate market reaction was dramatic. Seeking Alpha said Intel shares rose more than 12% in extended trading, while Reuters reported the gain reached roughly 15% after the earnings release. Barron’s also described a jump of as much as 17% in after-hours trading. The exact figure varied as the stock moved, but the overall message was the same: investors were caught off guard by how far Intel cleared expectations.
There are a few reasons that kind of move can happen after an earnings report.
First, expectations had been modest. Reuters noted before the release that analysts were expecting a slight year-over-year revenue decline and a steep drop in adjusted EPS. When a company beats a low bar by a wide margin, the stock reaction can be amplified.
Second, Intel improved profitability on an adjusted basis. Non-GAAP gross margin rose to 41.0% from 39.2% a year earlier, while non-GAAP operating margin improved to 12.3% from 5.4%. For investors, margin expansion is often as important as revenue growth because it signals healthier execution and better product mix.
Third, the report strengthened the broader turnaround narrative. Intel highlighted product launches across Xeon and Core lines, a multiyear collaboration with Google around Xeon deployments and custom ASIC infrastructure, and selection of Intel Xeon 6 as the host CPU for Nvidia’s DGX Rubin NVL8 systems. It also pointed to involvement in the Terafab project alongside SpaceX, xAI, and Tesla, plus expanded assembly and test capacity in Malaysia. These developments suggest Intel is working to deepen customer ties while positioning itself more directly in AI infrastructure and manufacturing.
What investors should watch next
Even with a strong quarter, Intel’s story is not risk-free. On a GAAP basis, the company still posted a net loss attributable to Intel of $3.7 billion, or $0.73 per diluted share. Non-GAAP results were much stronger, but the gap between GAAP and adjusted figures shows that restructuring costs and other charges remain important to the investment case.
Investors should also keep watching whether Data Center & AI growth can stay elevated and whether Intel can translate foundry investment into durable external customer demand. Intel’s own forward-looking disclosures note uncertainty around future market share, demand trends, margins, and next-generation process technologies such as Intel 14A.
Still, this earnings report clearly changed the near-term conversation. Instead of focusing only on Intel’s challenges in AI and manufacturing, the market is now looking at evidence that the company can produce upside surprises in revenue, earnings, and guidance. For stock market investors, that does not settle the long-term debate around Intel. But it does show that the company’s earnings power and segment momentum look stronger than Wall Street had priced in going into the quarter.
FAQ
Why did the stock rise after earnings?
Intel stock rose after the company reported first-quarter revenue and adjusted EPS above Wall Street forecasts and issued second-quarter guidance that also topped consensus estimates.
What were the company’s first-quarter 2026 results?
Intel reported first-quarter revenue of about $13.6 billion and non-GAAP EPS of $0.29. Revenue was up 7% year over year.
How did the Data Center and AI business perform?
Data Center and AI revenue reached about $5.1 billion in the quarter, up 22% from a year earlier and above analyst expectations reported ahead of earnings.
What is Intel’s guidance for the second quarter of 2026?
Intel guided for second-quarter revenue of $13.8 billion to $14.8 billion, non-GAAP EPS of $0.20, and non-GAAP gross margin of 39.0%.
Does this earnings report mean Intel’s turnaround is complete?
No. The report strengthens Intel’s recovery narrative, but investors still need to watch margins, foundry execution, AI-related demand, and the gap between GAAP and adjusted profitability.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.





