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'We can't completely vacate the client market' says Intel amid wafer supply shortages — Nova Lake still on-track for late 2026 release, 14A in 2028

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Intel reconfirmed its commitment to the consumer market during its Q4 2025 earnings, despite a heavy focus on wafer supply shortages and increased demand from the data center and AI markets. The company is shifting its internal wafer supply to the DCAI segment while relying on external wafer supply for CCG (Client Compute Group).

Responding to a question about weaker-than-expected DCAI outlook, David Zinsner, Chief Financial Officer at Intel, said: "We're shifting as much as we can over to the data center... we can't completely vacate the client market." Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan also highlighted shortages affecting other areas, saying, "The industry is facing a very big challenge, you know, the memory constraints and the pricing."

Intel's focus for the last quarter of 2025 was Panther Lake, now known as Core Ultra Series 3, which is set to arrive in-market for customers on January 27. Despite a big push for client, Intel says that its "client CPU inventory is lean," and that "rising component pricing... could limit our client opportunity this year."

On the client front, Tan once again said that next-gen Nova Lake desktop CPUs are on-track for release in late 2026 where it will face off against AMD's upcoming Zen 6 CPUs, which are also expected later this year. Nova Lake will be the first desktop CPU to use Intel's 18A process. Its successor, 14A, will enter risk production in late 2027 and full production in 2028, says Tan.

Although Intel has technically shipped 18A, Tan still recognized yield shortfalls facing Intel's cutting-edge node. "I'm disappointed that we not able to fully meet the demand of our markets... yields are in-line with our internal plans, [but] they're still below where I want them to be," the executive said. Tan said yields are improving for 18A month-over-month, targeting a 7% to 8% improvement each month — a pace that Intel hopes will reduce per-unit pricing.

Image 1 of 4 (Image credit: Intel) (Image credit: Intel) (Image credit: Intel) (Image credit: Intel)

Overall, Intel's Q4 revenue was $13.7 billion, down 4% year-over-year. For full-year 2025, Intel is flat year-over-year. More interesting are the business unit splits. For CCG, Intel posted $8.2 billion for Q4, which is down 7% year-over-year, dragging down CCG's year-over-year revenue for the full year of 2025 by 3%.

Although the DCAI business group represents about half of the revenue of CCG, it saw growth in Q4. With revenue of $4.7 billion for the quarter, it's up 9% year-over-year. For the full year, DCAI revenue came in at $16.9 billion, which is up 5% year-over-year.

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It's a growing business unit, though not growing at nearly the rate of Intel's competitors. AMD hasn't shared full-year earnings for 2025 yet, but it posted a 22% year-over-year growth in its data center segment in Q3 2025. Meanwhile, Nvidia posted 25% improvements quarter-over-quarter and a 66% boost in year-over-year revenue for its data center segment.

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