U.S. to Acquire Stake in Intel
Briefly

President Donald Trump announced that the federal government will take a 10 percent stake in Intel. The stake, valued at about $10 billion at current stock prices, will be obtained by converting CHIPS Act grants into equity. Trump said the proposal came from Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan and noted Tan had sought to keep his job. Shareholder approval will be required and the government may face legal challenges. The stake would rank among the largest government industry interventions since the Great Recession. The government stake will carry no voting rights. The move aligns with efforts to bolster domestic chip manufacturing amid growing Chinese dominance.
President Donald Trump announced Friday that the U.S. federal government will take a 10 percent stake in the chip manufacturer Intel. This share, worth about $10 billion at current stock prices, will be acquired by converting grants provided to the company under the former President Joe Biden's CHIPS Act into equity.
The proposal, Trump said, came from Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan, who Trump argued should resign earlier this year. "He walked in wanting to keep his job, and he ended up giving us $10 billion for the United States," said the president.
Shareholders will need to approve the acquisition, and the government may face legal challenges. If the deal goes through, the resulting stake will be one of the largest government interventions in industry since the Great Recession. The government will not have voting rights.
In recent years, the U.S. has been working to shore up its domestic chip-manufacturing industry in the face of growing Chinese dominance.
Read at The American Conservative
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