When Nvidia (NVDA) expresses interest in any company, investors should pay attention. According to a recent 13F-filing, Nvidia has invested a hefty amount of around $7.9 billion in Intel (INTC), now holding 214,776,632 shares of INTC stock.
The timing is not random. Intel has been in the spotlight as it rebuilds its foundation for the artificial intelligence (AI) age. This investment signals Nvidia’s confidence in Intel’s comeback story.
INTC stock is up 21% so far this year, outperforming the S&P 500 Index ($SPX). Should you grab INTC stock now?
Valued at $227 billion, Intel designs and manufactures semiconductor chips that power PCs, data centers, and AI systems. During the fourth-quarter earnings call, management emphasized that Intel’s biggest issue is constrained supply and not weak demand. Intel saw strong demand across client computing, data centers, AI infrastructure, custom silicon, and networking. The company reported $52.9 billion in total revenue in 2025, flat year-over-year (YOY). However, the firm also reported a profit of $0.42 per share, compared to a loss of $0.13 in 2024.
For Nvidia, which relies on CPUs as host processors in AI systems, deeper integration with Intel strengthens its ecosystem positioning. This is especially relevant now that Intel is building a custom Xeon that is fully integrated with Nvidia’s NVLink technology. Another strategic asset Intel brings to the table is the ability to deploy devices based on Intel 18A, the most sophisticated semiconductor process created and manufactured in the United States. Nvidia relies heavily on external foundry capacity. Thus, having a strategic ownership in a U.S.-based advanced manufacturing partner provides Nvidia with supplier diversity, risk mitigation, and greater manufacturing control, giving it a competitive advantage.
Furthermore, Intel is not seeking short-term aggressive growth. Instead, the company is focusing on stabilizing yields, improving wafer starts across current nodes, keeping a tight capital allocation, and delaying spending on 14A nodes until customers commit. These strategic moves are likely why Nvidia chose Intel, as it reveals it could prove to be a stable and reliable long-term partner in advanced manufacturing and AI infrastructure.


