With profits returning, Intel prioritizes AI server chips over consumer CPUs, delays Panther Lake rollout, and confirms 14A’s future.

Intel’s Q3 2025 earnings call on October 23, 2025, revealed a strategic pivot toward AI and cautious optimism for PC market growth, tempered by supply constraints and manufacturing challenges.

Reporting its first profit in nearly two years, bolstered by investments from Nvidia, Softbank, and U.S. CHIPS Act funds, Intel is navigating a complex landscape as Windows 10 nears its end-of-support in October 2025. The company projects the strongest PC demand since the 2021 pandemic surge, per Reuters .

CEO Lip-Bu Tan and CFO David Zinsner outlined a focus on AI server chips over consumer processors to address shortages peaking in Q1 2026.

“We’re prioritizing server shipments over entry-level client parts,” Tan said, announcing annual AI GPU releases to compete with Nvidia’s Blackwell and AMD’s MI450. This shift may delay gaming GPU updates, raising concerns among enthusiasts on X .

Intel’s much-anticipated Panther Lake chips, built on the 18A process, face hurdles. With only one SKU launching in 2025 and broader rollout in 2026, Zinsner called Panther Lake “pretty expensive” due to suboptimal yields, per Bloomberg .

Intel is pushing Lunar Lake chips through mid-2026, adjusting pricing to steer PC makers toward available stock. Yields for 18A are “adequate” but won’t hit profitable margins until 2026 or 2027, Zinsner noted.

The 18A node, central to Intel’s foundry ambitions, will power three generations of client and server chips, ruling out a return to the “tick-tock” model of alternating shrinks and architectures.

However, Tan confirmed the 14A node’s survival, with customer backing boosting confidence in its yields, surpassing 18A’s early performance, per TechCrunch . Intel’s $500 billion U.S. manufacturing expansion, partnered with TSMC and Foxconn, hinges on “committed external demand” to avoid overinvestment.

For PC buyers, Lunar Lake offers solid performance—check specs on Intel’s site. Investors can track Intel’s stock, up 5% post-earnings, on Yahoo Finance. As Intel balances AI growth with PC demand, its foundry pivot faces scrutiny, but 14A’s promise and CHIPS Act support signal resilience in a competitive AI-driven market.