Intel Foundry’s trajectory in the semiconductor industry appears closely tied to its ability to attract major clients to its upcoming Intel 14A manufacturing process. Recent reports and analyst commentary suggest Apple is considering Intel as a fabrication partner for future M-series processors, a move that would mark a significant shift in Apple’s longstanding reliance on TSMC for advanced chip production. NVIDIA is also rumored to be weighing Intel’s 14A process for select GPUs, raising the stakes for the foundry´s future and intensifying competition at the leading edge of chip manufacturing.
GF Securities analyst Jeff Pu has indicated that Intel is already sampling preliminary versions of its Intel 14A process development kit (PDK) with customers. Pu claims that both Apple and NVIDIA have shown interest, with potential test chip production already underway. The 14A node represents a technological step forward, integrating second-generation RibbonFET transistors and PowerDirect technology, enhancing what Intel previously introduced with PowerVia in its 18A node. Designed for advanced applications in artificial intelligence and edge computing, this technology could provide a new foundation for next-gen consumer devices and data-centric workloads.
While Apple’s longstanding and fruitful relationship with TSMC makes any pivot significant, industry observers note that a dual-sourcing strategy is plausible given TSMC’s overbooked capacity servicing Apple, AMD, NVIDIA, Qualcomm, and MediaTek. With Intel and TSMC both targeting similar timeframes for their 14A and A14 process nodes, respectively, Apple’s decision could come down to securing supply resilience and maintaining competitive technical advantages. For Intel, winning Apple´s business would offer a much-needed endorsement and a potential lifeline; failure to land marquee customers like Apple or NVIDIA could imperil Intel Foundry’s continued existence as TSMC remains the dominant player. The coming years will reveal whether these rumored deals materialize, potentially reshaping alliances and the competitive landscape for advanced semiconductors.