Intel’s recent performance has been turbulent. Following a remarkable rally that pushed shares up over 200% from March 30 through May 11, the chipmaker has endured five consecutive days of losses, shedding 16% during that period. Pre-market trading Tuesday suggested another 2% decline was in store.
Intel Corporation, INTC
This represents a dramatic turnaround. Yet Wall Street’s research community isn’t sounding alarm bells.
The semiconductor giant’s shares remain elevated by more than 190% in 2026. The current downturn, though uncomfortable for investors, appears to be more of a consolidation following a parabolic advance rather than the beginning of a sustained downtrend.
In a research note published Monday, Seaport’s Jay Goldberg provided perspective on the situation. He recognized that the semiconductor sector’s rally has been so aggressive that numerous stocks are now trading well beyond what their current fundamentals support.
This represents an important differentiation. Goldberg additionally noted that Nvidia faces ongoing challenges with elevated market expectations and persistent supply chain limitations, factors that may create near-term headwinds for that company’s stock.
Intel’s investment thesis received reinforcement from two separate analyst upgrades released this week.
Following a fireside discussion with Intel leadership, Benchmark’s Cody Acree emerged with strengthened conviction. He believes the investment community is still failing to fully appreciate Intel’s earnings potential for 2027 and 2028, along with the valuation premium the market may eventually assign to the stock.
Acree maintained his Buy recommendation while boosting his price objective to $140 from $105. Based on Monday’s closing price, this target represents roughly 30% upside potential.
Citi similarly elevated its outlook, pushing its target from $95 to $130. The firm’s research team emphasized that the server CPU market is poised for far more rapid expansion than previous forecasts suggested, propelled by demand associated with agentic artificial intelligence workloads.
According to Citi’s revised projections, the total addressable market for server CPUs will surge to $131.5 billion by 2030—a dramatic increase from the $29.3 billion market size in 2025. This represents explosive growth compressed into a five-year timeframe.
Citi’s analysis divides the opportunity into three distinct categories: traditional general-purpose CPUs, AI head node processors, and CPUs dedicated to agentic applications.
The agentic CPU segment is projected to experience the most dramatic expansion. Citi forecasts this category reaching $59.4 billion by 2030, representing 45% of the total market opportunity.
Intel is positioned to capture a substantial portion of this expanding market. Citi’s model anticipates Intel maintaining a 47% share by the close of the decade.
The investment bank also identified additional upside potential from Intel’s custom ASIC offerings, particularly the Mount Evans IPU product. This technology serves Google’s infrastructure and connects to Anthropic’s systems—positioning Intel strategically within some of the most rapidly developing segments of AI infrastructure deployment.
As part of its updated financial model, Citi also raised its revenue projections for Intel’s data center business segment.
The post Intel (INTC) Stock Falls 16% in Five Days—Analysts Double Down With Higher Price Targets appeared first on Blockonomi.


