Intel Corp. forecast a 2022 outlook above Wall Street estimates Thursday, after the chip maker provided its promised outlook for the year at an investor meeting.
Intel INTC, -1.37% shares, which were up less than 1% after hours as Intel Chief Executive Pat Gelsinger began his keynote, fluctuated between slight gains and losses after the outlook was revealed. Shares finished down 1.4% at $47.57 in Thursday’s regular session.
Chief Financial Officer David Zinsner forecast earnings of $3.50 a share on revenue of $76 billion for 2022, with a gross margin of 52%, and “slightly” negative cash flow of $1 billion to $2 billion.
For the year, analysts had been estimating earnings of $3.42 a share on revenue of $74.99 billion heading into Thursday’s event.
“I’m a meet-beat-raise sort of guy,” Gelsinger had said earlier during his keynote, stressing the same sentiment for the company after the outlook was presented.
When Intel reported earnings in late January, Zinsner, formerly CFO of Micron Technology Inc. MU, -2.43%, had promised investors a full-year outlook when the company held its February investor meeting. When the company only provided a first-quarter outlook, shares fell to their lowest price in more than a year.
In January, Intel executives forecast gross margins of 52% for the first quarter, which is expected to translate into adjusted earnings of 80 cents a share, though that was before Intel announced it would buy Israel-based chip maker Tower Semiconductor Ltd. TSEM, -0.78% and its fabs for $5.4 billion. Analysts on average had expected adjusted first-quarter earnings of 86 cents a share on revenue of $17.61 billion, while Intel forecast revenue of about $18.3 billion.
The only full-year metric Zinsner had provided during earnings in January was a forecast for gross margins of 51% to 53% for the year. At the conference, he said that should last until 2024, with a range of 54% to 58% from 2025 onwards.
Zinsner also forecast free cash flow of 20% of revenue by 2026.
Sandra Rivera, who heads Intel’s data-center group, forecast mid-to-high single-digit growth out to 2023, with that becoming growth in the mid-teens out to 2026.
Michelle Holthaus, who heads the chip maker’s PC business, called for low-to-mid single-digit growth going forward.
Elsewhere in the chip sector, not even a near-perfect earnings report and outlook saved Nvidia Corp. NVDA, -7.56% shares during Thursday’s regular session. Nvidia shares finished down 7.5%.
As of the close of markets Thursday, Intel shares are down 23% over the past 12 months, while the PHLX Semiconductor Index SOX, -3.74% has advanced 8%, the S&P 500 index SPX, -2.12% has risen 11%, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index COMP, -2.88% has shed 2%.