Intel made interim CEO Robert Swan’s role permanent on Thursday,
marking the first time the chipmaker has picked a leader who did not
rise through the company ranks, sending Intel shares down and boosting
rivals.
Swan, 58, who was previously Intel's CFO, served in the same position
at eBay for nine years before a stint in private equity and joining
Intel in 2016.
His career in corporate finance marks
a sharp break from tradition at
Intel, which has typically been led by engineers who spent decades at
the company and time in both its microchip architecture and
manufacturing businesses.
Intel shares fell 2.6% to $46.29 in midday trading and shares of competing chip firms gained.
Advanced Micro Devices shares jumped 6.7% and Nvidia rose 4.1%,
helping drive the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index up nearly 8%. Intel
shares were the biggest loser in the index.
Swan will be tasked with getting Intel's manufacturing operations
back on track and fending off newer chip rivals that are eating into
Intel's dominance in personal computers and data centers.
Intel intends to keep manufacturing its flagship CPU chips but
remains open to using outsiders to make chips in newer markets like
chips for cars or artificial intelligence, Swan told Reuters.
"This is a capital-intensive industry, and we always have to evaluate
whether it makes sense to have manufacturing for a given technology,"
Swan said. "In the high-performance computing arena, we just believe
we're the best in the world at it."
Given Swan's short tenure and lack of experience in manufacturing,
many analysts believed he was unlikely to be named permanent CEO.
Swan has also publicly said he was not interested in
becoming the permanent Intel CEO. But sources familiar with the matter
said Swan had privately said he would accept the role if offered.
Swan has kept Intel's profit consistent with tight cost controls,
analysts said. He helped Intel shares rebound after investors were
spooked by a July disclosure that the company would miss the target date
for its newest-generation chips, though the stock tracked the tech
sector lower in the following months. But questions remain about Intel's
ability to get its next generation of 10-nanonmeter chips to market by
the end of this year in personal computers and early next year in data
centers.
"Swan is a rock-solid leader and financial manager," Chaim Siegel of
Elazar Advisors said. "My guess why the stock's down is investors may
have been hoping for someone with more of an operations focus to get
them through these (chip manufacturing) transitions."
In recent decades the chip industry has split between design and
manufacturing, with manufacturing firms like Taiwan Semiconductor
Manufacturing specialising in factories that make chips while firms
such as Qualcomm specialise in designing chips but outsource
manufacturing.
Intel is one of the few remaining companies that both designs and
manufactures chips. But it has lost its lead in making the world's
smallest chip features to TSMC last year and is facing a growing threat
from rivals like AMD and Nvidia that do not make their own chips.
Swan will likely continue Intel's strategy of recent years to
identify areas where it can expand beyond its core CPU chips, such as
artificial intelligence chips, said Stacy Rasgon, an analyst with
Bernstein.
"Bob will keep the ship afloat. The ship is going where it's going," Rasgon said. "Hopefully there's no iceberg."
But Swan will face tough choices. These include whether to keep
focusing on businesses such as memory and modem chips that connect
phones to wireless data networks. Those businesses are much lower margin
than Intel's CPU business, Rasgon said.
Others who analysts saw as contenders, such as Murthy Renduchintala,
Intel's chief engineering officer and a longtime Qualcomm executive, and
Intel's data centre chief Navin Shenoy, have been immersed in the
details of the chip business for decades.
Media reports had also said Intel's board was interested in Johny
Srouji, the Apple executive responsible for driving the increasing
number of custom chips in Apple's devices.
"People wanted a Microsoft kind of announcement, like (Satya)
Nadella" said Joel Kulina, a Wedbush trader in Toronto. Nadella led a
resurgence at Microsoft that has it vying with Amazon.com Inc and Apple
to be the world's largest technology company.
"But what do we get? The CFO, because the CEO search produced
nothing. ... It’s bizarre for a company like Intel to have a leader who
does not have a technical background. He’s a cost cutter."
Swan said his skills complement Intel's existing technologists, some poached from rivals such as AMD in recent years.
"This company is extremely rich in technical talent, both on the
design and architecture side and the process and manufacturing side,"
Swan said. "My role, and my challenge, is how do we unleash that
technical talent going forward to continue to do special things?"
Swan had been in temporary charge of the chipmaker since last June
when Brian Krzanich left after an investigation found he had a
consensual relationship with an employee in breach of company policy.
Swan will be the seventh CEO in Intel's 50-year history.
Intel said Todd Underwood, vice president of finance, would become
interim chief financial officer as the company undertakes an internal
and external search for a permanent CFO.
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