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Intel Says The Idea Of Splitting Up Company Is An Open Question

Intel’s struggles to keep pace with rivals — along with its deteriorating financial condition — have spurred speculation that the next CEO will make dramatic changes.

<div class="paragraphs"><p>The Intel headquarters in Santa Clara, California.Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg</p></div>
The Intel headquarters in Santa Clara, California.Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- Intel Corp. Chief Financial Officer Dave Zinsner said that a formal separation of the company’s factory and product-development divisions is an open question that will be decided by the chipmaker’s next leader.

Zinsner, who is serving as interim co-chief executive officer following this month’s ouster of Pat Gelsinger, spoke Thursday at the Barclays technology conference in San Francisco alongside co-CEO Michelle Johnston Holthaus.

Intel’s struggles to keep pace with rivals — along with its deteriorating financial condition — have spurred speculation that the next CEO will make dramatic changes. That’s included talk of a split of the company’s manufacturing and product-design operations.

“That’s an open question for another day,” Zinsner said in response to an analyst question.

The two units are already separated operationally, with different oversight and accounts, he said. Gelsinger, who served as CEO from 2021 until last week, had maintained that the two main parts of the company were better kept together.

The shares gained 1.9% to $20.50 at 12:18 p.m. in New York. They had plunged 60% through Wednesday’s close.

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