CodeHorizon 7 days ago

I just finished reading the new shareholder letter from Intel’s freshly appointed CEO, Lip-Bu Tan, and I genuinely had to pause and ask myself: wait, didn’t Pat already say all of this?

The letter talks about accelerating the turnaround, focusing on customers, driving execution, cutting costs, and leaning hard into Intel’s IDM 2.0 strategy — the exact same themes we’ve heard from Pat Gelsinger for the last four years. There’s mention of 18A, Panther Lake, Nova Lake, Clearwater Forest, the foundry + product integration staying intact, and the importance of AI workloads and rack-scale systems.

It’s all there. The language might be a bit more “operational,” a little less inspirational, but it’s clearly the same blueprint.

Lip-Bu even references the 15% workforce reduction — which, to be clear, happened last year under Pat. He frames it as a necessary step, one that they’ll keep building on with ongoing cost-cutting and “portfolio simplification.” So far, though, no radical changes have been announced. It’s more like a continuation with maybe a slightly sharper knife.

The thing is: both Pat and Lip-Bu are engineers. They’re close in age. Neither one is exactly Steve Jobs in the charisma department. Both believe in Intel’s potential and have made it clear they want to keep the foundry and product businesses under one roof. Both are committed to heavy capital investment while streamlining operations. The core philosophy hasn’t changed.

And look — I get it. You can’t pivot a ship like Intel overnight. After four years and billions poured into foundry strategy, fabs, and long-term bets, no new CEO is going to walk in and say, “Let’s cancel everything.” That’d be insane. So of course Lip-Bu is going to continue most of it, at least for now.

But that’s what makes this feel strange. If the board was going to go as far as firing Pat — a public, major move — you’d expect something more than a change in tone or pacing. You’d expect a new direction. A clear shift in strategy. Something bold. But that’s not what we got.

So the only conclusion I can draw is that this wasn’t about the what, it was about the who. Maybe the board got impatient. Maybe they lost confidence in Pat’s ability to execute. Maybe there was a personal or operational disagreement behind closed doors. Could’ve been politics, or Wall Street pressure, or just frustration with the stock performance. Who knows.

But from the outside, it feels like they replaced the pilot without changing the flight plan.

Personally, I think Pat should’ve been given the full five years — maybe even more — to see his turnaround through. Four years just doesn’t feel like enough for the kind of deep transformation Intel is attempting.

Curious what others here think: - Was this about execution speed or internal politics? - Can a leadership change like this actually make a difference if the strategy is the same? - And does it make you feel better or worse about Intel’s direction going forward?

  • aurareturn 7 days ago

    Pat was arrogant. He didn't know how to get 3rd party fab customers. Nvidia, AMD, Apple did not trust him. He comes from the old Intel regime when it was all roses and Intel was at the top of the world. He didn't realize that Intel was at the bottom and it needed to do whatever it took to win customers.

    Here's Morris Chang's opinion of Pat Gelsinger:

      Chang said he found Pat Gelsinger’s attitude to TSMC “hostile”, adding he had been friends with Bob Noyce and Gordon Moore and been close to many Intel CEOs but not to Gelsinger.
    
      Previously Chang has described Gelsinger as “discourteous” and “a bit cocky”.
    
    Here's what Tan said recently:

      Tan said the company needs to listen to prospective outside customers for its factories and let them specify the design and manufacture of their products, rather than Intel dictating the way it will be done. Tan said many large customers want custom parts — and his company will do it for them.
    
    This is clearly a shot taken at Pat, who did not know how to win fab customers.

    Lastly, Pat hired a ton of people. Intel increased employee count under his watch while revenue decreased by 50%. Tan wanted to cut way more. Pat didn't.

    So while the strategy is similar, Pat's execution was severely lacking.

    • pointyfence 4 days ago

      I think Pat enforced his dismissive optimism on the entire company which made a tough job even tougher. A number of Intel executives, new and old, have taken indirect shots at Pat when he got pushed out even before Tan came on board.

      I still see a lot of people worship Gelsinger just because he was supposedly the engineer CEO messiah that Intel needed. But he had a flawed strategy made worse by naive, arrogant execution.

    • CodeHorizon 7 days ago

      Thanks! That’s a really interesting perspective. From the outside, it’s hard to get a full view of how Pat was perceived by potential foundry customers or what was happening inside the boardroom. I actually watched Lip-Bu reading from the teleprompter at that recent Intel conference, and yeah, maybe I see what you’re saying. The tone felt more grounded compared to Pat.

      The only sad part is… it feels like Lip-Bu might now need another 4–5 years to fix things.. . basically restarting the clock.

  • re-thc 7 days ago

    > So the only conclusion I can draw is that this wasn’t about the what, it was about the who.

    Board members "retired" once Lip-Bu Tan arrived as CEO i.e. the board also changed.