Kicking off yet another earnings season, we once again start with Intel. The reigning 800lb gorilla of the chipmaking world is reporting its Q4 2022 and full-year 2022 financial results, closing the book on what has turned an increasingly difficult year for the company. As Intel’s primary client and datacenter markets have reached saturation on the back of record sales and spending is slowing for the time being, Intel is seeing significant drops in revenue for both markets. These headwinds, though not unexpected, have broken Intel’s 6-year streak of record yearly revenue – and sent the company back into the red for the most recent quarter.

Starting with quarterly results, for the fourth quarter of 2022, Intel reported $14.0B in revenue, which is a major, 32% decline versus the year-ago quarter. With Intel coming off of what was their best Q4 ever just a year ago, as the saying goes: the higher the highs, the lower the lows. As a result, Q4’22 will go down in the books as a money-losing quarter for Intel (on a GAAP basis), with the company losing $661M for the quarter, a 114% decline in net income. Overall, Intel’s revenue for the quarter was low end of their already conservative forecasted range.

Looking briefly at GAAP versus non-GAAP figures, there’s a significant gap between the two, with the official GAAP net income coming in about $1.1B lower than its baseline counterpart – which is to say that Intel was at least in the black for its core business. To some extent it looks like Intel is using what was already a bad quarter to record some GAAP expenses (e.g. restructuring and inventory write downs), but at the end of the day the company has pretty consistent cost overhead, particularly on R&D and other fixed costs. So a significant drop in product sales comes right out of Intel’s bottom line. Ultimately, this has driven Intel’s quarterly gross margin down to just 39.2%, below Intel’s break-even point and well below the historical norm for the company.

Driving this drop has been roughly the same factors that have been a drag on Intel’s earnings for the last half year: after a spike in product sales during the pandemic, the processor market as a whole has reached saturation, sending both client and server sales down. And with the looming possibility of a recession, corporate and consumer buyers alike are being more conservative with their pocket books. At the same time, Intel hasn’t been helped by some of its product release cadences, such as the next-generation Sapphire Rapids server platform only finally launching a few weeks ago, in the first quarter of 2023.

Intel Q4 2022 Financial Results (GAAP)
  Q4'2022 Q3'2022 Q4'2021 Y/Y
Revenue $14.0B $15.3B $20.5B -32%
Operating Income -$1.1B -$175M $5.0B -123%
Net Income -$661M $1.0B $4.6B -114%
Gross Margin 39.2% 42.6% 53.6% -14.5 ppt
Client Computing $6.6B $8.1B $10.3B -36%
Datacenter & AI $4.3B $4.2B $6.4B -33%
Network & Edge $2.1B $2.3B $2.1B -1%
Accelerated Computing Systems and Graphics $247M $185M $245M +1%
Mobileye $565M $450M $356M +59%
Intel Foundry Services $319M $171M $245M +30%

Breaking things down on a group basis, Intel’s two core business groups, client computing (CCG) and datacenter (DCAI) are both well off their revenue highs from last year. And in the case of CCG, revenues are down significantly even versus the prior quarter.

Despite a sizable 36% drop in operating revenue, Intel’s client group was still profitable on an operating basis, if only barely. Given that this is Intel’s biggest group by revenue, that’s a small victory – but with an operating income of only around $700M, it’s a very small victory indeed. As noted earlier, CCG is bearing the brunt of the boom and bust cycle set into motion by the pandemic, with lower end-user sales, and Intel’s OEM customers working to reduce the amount of inventory they’re holding on to.

Digging through Intel’s sheets, client notebook revenue was $3.66B, while client desktop revenue was $2.5B. Both are down over 30% versus the year-ago quarter, though notebook revenue saw the bigger drop, which is a bit of a concern since it’s the larger share of Intel’s client revenue to begin with. Intel has not disclosed any figures for average sale prices for this quarter, so it’s not clear how much of this decline is being driven by volume versus lower prices.

Meanwhile, datacenter & AI revenue was down 33% to $4.3B. This is a less precipitous drop than the client group, but only barely so. Though unlike Intel’s client sales, DCAI is facing challenges on more than just overall industry demand. Intel has been steadily losing server market share to reenergized rival AMD, who launched their latest generation of EPYC CPUs in Q4. Meanwhile Intel’s delayed next-generation Sapphire Rapids platform only finally launched a few weeks ago (Q5’22), so even among Intel’s most loyal datacenter customers, there has been a pause as they wait for Intel’s big server platform update to finally become available. All the while Intel has needed to continue investing in Emerald Rapids and beyond.

Moving down the list, Intel’s Network and Edge group also ended the quarter down on a year-ago basis, though faring much better overall and almost breaking even. All told, the group booked $2.1B in revenue, which was down 1% from Q4’21. Operating income was still down significantly, however, which Intel is attributing to investments in future products.

The silver lining for Intel for Q4’22, at least, is that outside of their billion dollar plus big revenue groups, the company’s smaller groups were all up for the quarter. Accelerated Computing Systems and Graphics (AXG) saw a slight revenue bump of 1%, as well as cutting its operating losses. Meanwhile Mobileye and Intel Foundry Services both saw significant year-over-year gains. In Mobileye’s case, the automotive group has continued to grow its market and revenues, and Intel successfully IPO’d Mobileye in Q4 (which helped to buoy the value of their investments). Meanwhile IFS continued to grow as Intel has picked up new customer commitments and overall orders have increased.

Full Year 2023

Shifting over to full year results, 2022 has served as a turning point in Intel’s earnings, which has made for a softer decline overall than Q4 alone, but still driven by the same factors that made Q4 such a rough quarter for Intel. Overall revenue was down 20% to $63.1B, and while this caused net income to fall 60%, notably Intel is still well in the black on a yearly basis, booking $8B for the complete year.

Intel FY'2022 Financial Results (GAAP)
  FY 2022 FY 2021 FY 2020 Y/Y
Revenue $63.1B $79.0B $77.9B -20%
Operating Income $2.3B $19.5B $23.7B -88%
Net Income $8.0B $19.9B $20.9B -60%
Gross Margin 42.6% 55.4% 56.0% -12.8 ppt
Client Computing $31.7B $41.1B N/A -23%
Datacenter & AI $19.2B $22.7B N/A -15%
Network & Edge $8.9B $8.0B N/A +11%
Accelerated Computing Systems and Graphics $837M $774M N/A +8%
Mobileye $1.9B $1.4B N/A +35%
Intel Foundry Services $895M $786M N/A +14%

This blend of both the better times and the worse times for Intel is reflected in Intel’s gross margins as well, which for the year were 42.6%. That’s down some 12.8 percentage points from 2021, so even stretched out over a year, 2022 was not a great year for Intel. Meanwhile, as a bit of a balance sheet curiosity, Intel’s net income for the year was well ahead of their meager $2.3B operating income. That gap is due to Intel’s investments and cash pile producing good returns, with investments alone netting the company over $4B in GAAP net income for the year.

As 2022 was the first year for Intel’s refactored business groups, the company has also provided like-for-like revenue comparisons for 2021. Like Intel’s overall revenue, the revenue drop for the company’s biggest units wasn’t quite as severe for the entire year, though by no means good news. Client revenue was down 23% on the year, while datacenter revenue was down 15%. Otherwise, all of Intel’s remaining business units recorded revenue growth for the year – with everything except AXG growing by double digits.

One other big shift for Intel’s balance sheets in FY 2022 versus 2021 has been Intel’s exit from the storage business. Whereas selling off their NAND business in 2021 was a net positive for Intel’s sheets in that year, for 2022 they’re having to take write-downs on their Optane memory products as the company works to exit that business entirely. Overall, Intel has taken a total of $723M in Optane inventory impairment charges for 2022, including $164M in the most recent quarter.

2022 Expectations

Though we tend not to focus too much on Intel’s future earnings forecasts, given the rough shape of the processor market right now, their predictions for Q1’2023 warrant a quick look.

In short, Intel is expecting things to get worse before they get better. The company’s official projection for Q1’23 is for revenue to come in some 40% lower than Q1’22, or a bit north of $10B. As a result, Intel’s gross margin is expected to remain soft at 39%, and Intel projects that Q1 will be another money-losing quarter with a negative EPS. Intel’s slides use non-GAAP, but the projected GAAP figure is even worse, at -$0.80 per share.

Going into 2023 will also be the first full year where Intel’s cost reduction strategy comes into play, which the company first embarked upon in the later half of last year. Trying to trim costs without upending the company or impacting the development of Intel’s next-generation fab processes, Intel is looking to cut $3B in costs for 2023.

Separate from those efforts, in another effort to cut expenses, Intel has  disclosed that they are increasing the deprecation schedule for “certain production machinery and equipment” from 5 years to 8 years. Which is to say that Intel now expects to get a longer useful life out of this equipment than they were originally expecting and/or planning upon. As a result, Intel is expecting to reduce depreciation expenses in 2023 by roughly $4.2B. These changes are already baked into Intel’s earnings guidance for Q1’23, so as brutal as Intel’s Q1 projections currently look, technically things could be worse.

Finally, looking towards Intel’s product and process roadmap for the year, there is not much new to report for the moment. Intel remains steadfast on ramping up their Meteor Lake client SoC in the second half of this year, which will be Intel’s first client product built on their Intel 4 process. This will be followed by the brand-new Lunar Lake platform in 2024, which recently completed the initial tape-out for one of its tiles.

On the server side, now that Sapphire Rapids has launched, Intel is aiming to make up for lost time. The official server schedule is for Emerald Rapids to launch in the second half of this year, delivering a modest update to Intel’s Rapids platform. Emerald Rapids is an Intel 7 part like Sapphire, so for better and for worse, Intel won’t have the benefit of a new process node here – or the complexities of trying to bring up a large server part on such a node. Meanwhile Granite Rapids and Sierra Forest, which are both slated to be built on the Intel 3 process, remain on the schedule for 2024.

Otherwise, while the product updates tucked into Intel’s quarterly earnings are a fairly high-level overview of what’s to come, it’s notable that Intel doesn’t have anything new to talk about from their up-and-coming AXG GPU group. The last news on Rialto Bridge, Intel’s second-generation HPC accelerator, was that it wouldn’t start sampling until this year – so it’s unclear at best whether it will be shipping in any capacity this year. Similarly, the Battlemage architecture for client GPUs seems to be straddling the line between 2023 and 2024.

As for Intel’s fabs, there are no material changes being announced to Intel’s schedule. Intel 4 is officially “manufacturing ready” and Intel 3 is on track. Meanwhile Intel is in the process of fabbing the first test chips for their 20A and 18A processes. To that end, Intel still expects to kick off the High-NA era of silicon lithography in earnest in 2024.

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  • Otritus - Friday, February 3, 2023 - link

    Intel 4 is doing just fine. What you shouldn’t worry about is the nodes, but the processor design teams. Back in the day if there was a problem with the silicon, rather than the design team fixing the issue, the foundry would just change the node to fix the problem. Intel isn’t doing that anymore. Also, Intel has TSMC wafer allocations in case foundry is underperforming. Meaning that any processor delays/cancellations in the future is due to design not pulling their weight. Meteor Lake also has the issue of being the first 2D processor from Intel that uses tiles. Packaging problems may or may not be a thing. We’ll have to see. I expect by 2024 Intel’s design teams would have their shit together because if they don’t the company is going down like 2015 AMD.
  • Kvaern1 - Friday, January 27, 2023 - link

    The rumors say RPL refresh and mobile only Meteor Lake in 2023.
  • ikjadoon - Thursday, January 26, 2023 - link

    Brutal. Looks like Gelsinger didn’t know how to navigate the pandemic tech boom very well.

    Nothing interesting to sustain sales? IIRC, Mac sales were up massively, up 25% last quarter YoY. Oh, well, that’s because Apple offered the market what it wanted (and it was decidedly not Intel).

    Get it together, Chipzilla. Booms like these just pull forward future demand; they don’t create new demand.
  • Alistair - Friday, January 27, 2023 - link

    if you could install windows on macs, intel would be in real trouble
  • name99 - Friday, January 27, 2023 - link

    You can...
    https://machow2.com/parallels-review/
  • Pneumothorax - Sunday, January 29, 2023 - link

    Sorry only Windows ARM on apple silicon isn’t going to cut it for the majority of users.
  • PseudoKnight - Friday, January 27, 2023 - link

    "IIRC, Mac sales were up massively, up 25% last quarter YoY."

    Looked it up. Their unit sales were 2% down YoY for Q4 2022. This is still significantly better than the rest of the market. Even Apple's own smartphone sales were down 14.9%. They're more resistant to general market trends, but not immune.
  • Doug_S - Friday, January 27, 2023 - link

    The drop in iPhone sales was mostly due to covid outbreaks in the assembly plant in China that caused closure for several weeks. There was probably some hit in China sales due to the lockdowns, but I wouldn't be surprised to see a big YoY gain in China sales for Q2 with Chinese New Year and people happy the lockdowns are in the past.
  • TheinsanegamerN - Friday, January 27, 2023 - link

    You mean the drop in iphone production that was reported a week after it was reported that the non pro iphone 14 was selling like dog turds? How convenient for apple....
  • name99 - Friday, January 27, 2023 - link

    It STILL takes three weeks to get an iPhone Pro once you order it...
    The mismatch between demand (high) and supply (not as high) is not some "convenient" fantasy.

    https://www.phonearena.com/news/iphone-14-shipping...

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