Bloomberg reports the U.S. government is in discussions to take a 10% equity stake in Intel. Sources say the plan would convert some or all of Intel´s CHIPS Act grants into ownership, making the federal government the company´s ´largest shareholder´ with voting power over key decisions. The talks follow a White House meeting late last week between intel´s CEO Lip-Bu Tan and senior officials to discuss the future of Intel as a pillar of the U.S. semiconductor industry.
The report highlights that the CHIPS Act funding awarded to Intel has not yet appeared on the company´s balance sheet. Intel has previously warned that grant payments have been slow to arrive; the Bloomberg account echoes that constraint and frames the equity-for-grants approach as a way to resolve delayed disbursements. The article notes that the specific dollar figures cited in some summaries were unclear, and that the grants historically pledged for commercial and military applications have not materialized in cash receipts to date.
Converting grant commitments into an equity stake would have immediate governance implications. As the largest shareholder, the government would gain voting influence that could shape board decisions and strategic priorities. Proponents of the approach argue it could accelerate Intel Foundry expansion and research and development investment by providing a firmer capital commitment, while critics may raise questions about state ownership in a major private technology firm. Bloomberg´s sources say parts of the deal appear near completion, but the situation remains a developing story as negotiations continue and formal terms are not yet public.