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Intel’s new manufacturing tech enters initial production

By Thomson Reuters Jun 16, 2026 | 4:02 PM

June 16 (Reuters) – Intel on Tuesday said the new generation of its 18A manufacturing process has entered risk ​production, as the chipmaker sees strong ‌demand for its central processors.

By moving 18A-P into initial production, Intel is aiming to show it is following through on its manufacturing commitments, potentially ‌making ​the technology more appealing ⁠to external customers.

Intel ⁠CEO Lip-Bu Tan has started recognizing 18A as a potential offering for external clients, reversing his earlier view that the ​process would generate returns only through Intel’s own products, finance chief David Zinsner ⁠said in March.

Compared ⁠to 18A, 18A-P delivers 9% higher ​performance at the same power level — known ​as iso-power — or 18% lower power at ‌the same processing speed, which is iso-performance, alongside improved thermals and design flexibility.

18A-P is fully design-rule-compatible with Intel 18A, which enables ⁠reuse of existing intellectual property and design flows, the company said.

Demand for Intel’s central processors from ⁠firms offering ‌AI services was so ⁠strong in the first quarter that ​it ‌sold even chips it had ​originally written ⁠off.

It forecast second-quarter revenue of $13.8 billion to $14.8 billion, compared with an estimate of $13.07 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.

(Reporting by Juby Babu in Mexico City; Editing by ​Joyjeet Das)