intel
The recent market downturn has hit technology stocks particularly hard. That inherent volatility is why we advise investors to stick with well-established tech firms with popular products and services, such as Apple, Intel and IBM. All of them remain in a strong position to quickly rebound with the overall market....
INTEL CORP., $48.11, Nasdaq symbol INTC, remains a buy for long-term gains.
The company is the world’s leading maker of computer chips: its products power 90% of all personal computers and more than 80% of all datacentres.
With the March 2022 payment, Intel raised your quarterly dividend by 5.0%....
The company is the world’s leading maker of computer chips: its products power 90% of all personal computers and more than 80% of all datacentres.
With the March 2022 payment, Intel raised your quarterly dividend by 5.0%....
INTEL CORP., $51.83, Nasdaq symbol INTC, remains a buy for long-term gains.
The company is the world’s leading maker of computer chips: its products power 90% of all personal computers and more than 80% of all datacentres.
Intel is now buying Israeli software firm Granulate....
The company is the world’s leading maker of computer chips: its products power 90% of all personal computers and more than 80% of all datacentres.
Intel is now buying Israeli software firm Granulate....
These two senior technology companies are shifting into faster-growing fields. Those moves brighten their long-term prospects and should lead to more dividend hikes in the years to come.
INTEL CORP. $48 is a buy. The company (Nasdaq symbol INTC); Conservative Growth Dividend Payer Portfolio, Manufacturing & Industry sector; Shares outstanding: 4.1 billion; Market cap: $196.8 billion; Dividend yield: 3.0%; Dividend Sustainability Rating: Above Average; www.intel.com) is the world’s leading maker of computer chips.
With the March 2022 payment, Intel raised your quarterly dividend by 5.0%....
INTEL CORP. $47 is a buy. The company (Nasdaq symbol INTC; Manufacturing & Industry sector; Shares outstanding: 4.1 billion; Market cap: $192.7 billion; Dividend yield: 3.3%; Takeover Target Rating: Medium; www.intel.com) has filed the initial paperwork for an initial public offering of its Mobileye subsidiary later this year....
INTEL CORP., $45.04, Nasdaq symbol INTC, remains a buy for long-term gains.
The company is the world’s leading maker of computer chips: its products power 90% of all personal computers and more than 80% of all datacentres.
Intel announced a new strategic plan in 2021, which mainly involves improving its technical expertise and expanding its ability to make chips for other companies.
As part of that strategy, the company is now buying Tower Semiconductor Ltd....
The company is the world’s leading maker of computer chips: its products power 90% of all personal computers and more than 80% of all datacentres.
Intel announced a new strategic plan in 2021, which mainly involves improving its technical expertise and expanding its ability to make chips for other companies.
As part of that strategy, the company is now buying Tower Semiconductor Ltd....
INDIE SEMICONDUCTOR INC., $8.09, symbol INDI on Nasdaq, is a manufacturer of automotive semiconductors (computer chips) and software used in the sensors for advanced driver assistance systems, including LiDAR. Based in California, the company has offices in the U.S., Europe, Israel, Japan, and China.
LiDAR sensors on vehicles emit single particles of light, known as photons, that strike nearby objects such as cars, pedestrians, and trees....
LiDAR sensors on vehicles emit single particles of light, known as photons, that strike nearby objects such as cars, pedestrians, and trees....
Intel recently announced a new long-term strategy, which mainly involves expanding its ability to make chips for other companies.
To help fund the cost of building new chip plants, Intel will sell a minority stake in its Mobileye business to the public in 2022....
To help fund the cost of building new chip plants, Intel will sell a minority stake in its Mobileye business to the public in 2022....
The term “synergy” entered common investor use during the takeover craze of the 1960s, when businesses started to expand by taking over companies in unrelated fields. This was supposed to make the combined companies grow faster than if they had stuck to their own fields.
The acquirers borrowed a term from biology to explain their rationale: this mix-rather-than-match growth strategy brought synergistic benefits....
The acquirers borrowed a term from biology to explain their rationale: this mix-rather-than-match growth strategy brought synergistic benefits....