Lutnick says Intel has to give government equity in return for CHIPS Act funds

Lutnick says Intel has to give government equity in return for CHIPS Act funds


U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick: Intel has to give gov. equity in return for CHIPS funding

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said Tuesday that Intel must give the U.S. government an equity stake in the company in return for CHIPS Act funds.

“We should get an equity stake for our money,” Lutnick said on CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street” Tuesday. “So we’ll deliver the money, which was already committed under the Biden administration. We’ll get equity in return for it.”

Shares of the struggling chipmaker climbed 7% Tuesday, continuing to rally on recent reports that the Trump administration is weighing different ways to get involved with the company.

Bloomberg reported Monday that the White House was discussing a 10% stake in Intel, in a deal that could see the U.S. government become the chipmaker’s largest shareholder.

Intel and SoftBank announced on Monday that the Japanese conglomerate will make a $2 billion investment in the chipmaker. The investment, equal to about 2% of Intel, makes SoftBank the fifth-biggest shareholder, according to FactSet.

Lutnick said any potential arrangement wouldn’t provide the government with voting or governance rights in Intel.

“It’s not governance, we’re just converting what was a grant under Biden into equity for the Trump administration, for the American people,” Lutnick said. “Non-voting.”

Intel declined to comment.

Lutnick also suggested that President Donald Trump could seek out similar deals with other CHIPS recipients.

Intel was awarded about $7.9 billion in grants. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. was awarded $6.6 billion under the legislation to boost chip fabrication at its Arizona facilities.

“The Biden administration literally was giving Intel for free, and giving TSMC money for free, and all these companies just giving them money for free,” Lutnick said. “Donald Trump turns that into saying, ‘Hey, we want equity for the money. If we’re going to give you the money, we want a piece of the action.’ “

Trump has called for more reshoring of U.S. manufacturing to reduce the country’s reliance on companies like Samsung and TSMC to manufacture chips.

Intel has struggled to capitalize on the artificial intelligence boom in advanced semiconductors and has spent heavily to stand up a manufacturing business that’s yet to secure a significant customer. Intel tapped Lip-Bu Tan to be its CEO in March after his predecessor, Pat Gelsinger, was ousted in December.

Tan met with Trump at the White House last week after the president called for his resignation, alleging he had ties to China.

Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

hide content

Intel 5-day stock chart.

— CNBC’s Kif Leswing contributed to this report.



Source

Closing arguments conclude in Musk v. Altman, jury to deliberate next week
Technology

Closing arguments conclude in Musk v. Altman, jury to deliberate next week

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman arrives at the federal courthouse, as the trial in Elon Musk’s lawsuit over OpenAI’s for-profit conversion continues, in Oakland, California, U.S., May 14, 2026. Manuel Orbegozo | Reuters The first phase of the Musk v. Altman trial concluded proceedings in federal court in Oakland, California, on Thursday after attorneys for Elon […]

Read More
Cramer backs Nvidia selling AI chips in China — but says the stock can thrive either way
Technology

Cramer backs Nvidia selling AI chips in China — but says the stock can thrive either way

CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Nvidia should be allowed to sell artificial intelligence chips into China, arguing the U.S. would be better served by keeping Chinese companies reliant on American technology rather than forcing them to develop competing products. “You force them to build their own chips, they will catch up and with seemingly unlimited electricity, […]

Read More
Cerebras is the hot new AI chipmaker. Here’s Jim Cramer’s advice on the stock
Technology

Cerebras is the hot new AI chipmaker. Here’s Jim Cramer’s advice on the stock

CNBC’s Jim Cramer cautioned investors against chasing shares of Cerebras Systems after its explosive market debut Thursday. “While there might be a situation in the future where I can recommend Cerebras, I just can’t even come close to justifying the valuation up here given how much it’s already run right out of the gate,” the […]

Read More