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Intel Announces Appointing Lip-Bu Tan as New CEO

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Intel Corporation today announced that its board of directors has appointed Lip-Bu Tan, an accomplished technology leader with deep semiconductor industry experience, as chief executive officer, effective March 18. He succeeds Interim Co-CEOs David Zinsner and Michelle (MJ) Johnston Holthaus. Tan will also rejoin the Intel board of directors after stepping down from the board in August 2024. Zinsner will remain executive vice president and chief financial officer, and Johnston Holthaus will remain CEO of Intel Products. Frank D. Yeary, who took on the role of interim executive chair of the board during the search for a new CEO, will revert to being the independent chair of the board upon Tan becoming CEO.

"Lip-Bu is an exceptional leader whose technology industry expertise, deep relationships across the product and foundry ecosystems, and proven track record of creating shareholder value is exactly what Intel needs in its next CEO," Yeary said. "Throughout his long and distinguished career, he has earned a reputation as an innovator who puts customers at the heart of everything he does, delivers differentiated solutions to win in the market and builds high-performance cultures to achieve success."




"Like many across the industry, I have worked closely with Lip-Bu in the past and have seen firsthand how his relentless attention to customers drives innovation and success," Yeary continued. "We are delighted to have Lip-Bu as our CEO as we work to accelerate our turnaround and capitalize on the significant growth opportunities ahead."

On his appointment, Tan said, "I am honored to join Intel as CEO. I have tremendous respect and admiration for this iconic company, and I see significant opportunities to remake our business in ways that serve our customers better and create value for our shareholders.

"Intel has a powerful and differentiated computing platform, a vast customer installed base and a robust manufacturing footprint that is getting stronger by the day as we rebuild our process technology roadmap," Tan continued. "I am eager to join the company and build upon the work the entire Intel team has been doing to position our business for the future."

Yeary added, "On behalf of the board, I would like to thank Dave and Michelle for their steadfast leadership as interim co-CEOs. Their discipline and focus have been a source of stability as we continue the work needed to deliver better execution, rebuild product leadership, advance our foundry strategy and begin to regain investor confidence."

Tan is a longtime technology investor and widely respected executive with more than 20 years of semiconductor and software experiences as well as deep relationships across Intel's ecosystem. He formerly served as CEO of Cadence Design Systems from 2009 to 2021, where he led a reinvention of the company and drove a cultural transformation centered on customer-centric innovation. During his time as CEO, Cadence more than doubled its revenue, expanded operating margins and delivered a stock price appreciation of more than 3,200%. Tan served as a member of the Cadence board of directors for 19 years, from his appointment in 2004 through his service as executive chairman from 2021 to 2023 following his tenure as CEO. He is also a founding managing partner of Walden Catalyst Ventures and chairman of Walden International. He has significant public company board experience, currently serving on the boards of Credo Technology Group and Schneider Electric.

Tan holds a Bachelor of Science in physics from Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, a Master of Science in nuclear engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and an MBA from the University of San Francisco. In 2022, he received the Robert N. Noyce Award, the Semiconductor Industry Association's highest honor.

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Interesting. I guess we'll get to see what his vision is now and if he has really settled his differences with the board. Would be quite hilarious if he resigned again.
 
I thought the CEO answered to the BOD? Seems odd that he can be hired by the board, and then join the board.
 
Why the CEOs are always being chosen from foreigners? I mean is this some kind of policy which promotes multi cultural traditions of the company?
 
Why the CEOs are always being chosen from foreigners? I mean is this some kind of policy which promotes multi cultural traditions of the company?
Wow. Man gets a top notch education in the US and returns the favor by using it to benefit the US but still gets treated like this. I wish every smart person from everywhere in the world came here to do that.
 
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The "5 CEOs in 4 years" plan was narrowly missed.
 
His employment history at Cadence suggests Intel is intent on making the unsteady foundry (Contract fabricating) be competitive for outside customers.
 
> where he led a reinvention of the company and drove a cultural transformation centered on customer-centric innovation

This does not sound like "stay the course".
 
> where he led a reinvention of the company and drove a cultural transformation centered on customer-centric innovation

This does not sound like "stay the course".
The PC (x86) business is on course, he's not there for that.
If the "foundry" can't prove itself then it needs turfed overboard. Getting the foundry competitive will be his objective and he'll be getting judged on it.
 
As a consumer who is slightly familiar with Cadence, I am not happy with this. Their software is the most expensive, overly complicated, waste of money and time in the industry. Supposedly you can do a lot with it, but I have never worked at a business that could afford a license lol. "customer focused"... Sure.
 
The PC (x86) business is on course, he's not there for that.
If the "foundry" can't prove itself then it needs turfed overboard. Getting the foundry competitive will be his objective and he'll be getting judged on it.
The x86 business seems to be on course to founder on the rocks. Is there any product segment where Intel is showing "performance leadership"?
 
I don’t know about you but my white ass family did not originate from North America.
Are you from Pennsylvania? If you are, you might not be a US citizen, Pat Gelsinger is from Pennsylvania but he counts him as a foreigner. The logic must be it's because lake Erie is not full 100% on north american soil or something.
 
Guys, read between the lines: They're literally telling us, the split-off is imminent.
Zinsner will remain executive vice president and chief financial officer, and Johnston Holthaus will remain CEO of Intel Products.
Intel will most likely ditch their whole product-group with Michelle Johnsten-Holthaus, likely to Broadcom.

So either everything product to Broadcom (Xeon/Core/Atom/Pentium/Celeron, Xe Graphics/ARC), or all the parts are sold off to different vendors.
 
Aren't there plans to heavily subsidize Intel foundries, perhaps even with forced TSMC co-operation? You know, MAGA style?
 
I don’t know about you but my white ass family did not originate from North America. Over 300 years ago, we honorably trespassed in someone else’s backyard, wiped out almost all the residents, took their already tilled land, stole people from other countries to work that land for free and then made a great civilization to create brilliant crafts like Beavis and Butthead.
Damn, dog. What company ya'll run?
 
He was born in Malaysia but he's ethnic Chinese.

Chinese-Soldier.jpg
Uhm, so does that mean everyone in the US are ethnic whatever their ancestors where? So everyone except the natives are then English, Irish, Italian and so on?
 
Uhm, so does that mean everyone in the US are ethnic whatever their ancestors where? So everyone except the natives are then English, Irish, Italian and so on?
Is he ethnic Chinese or not?
 
Uhm, so does that mean everyone in the US are ethnic whatever their ancestors where? So everyone except the natives are then English, Irish, Italian and so on?
Yes, African Americans, Italian Americans, and so on.
 
Is he ethnic Chinese or not?
Sorry, I don't think you understand, there have been chinese descendents living in Malaysia since at least the 14th century, so how long does someone have to have ancestors in a country before they are considered being from that country?
Are you an inuit? If not, then you're not Alaskan by your logic.
 
Sorry, I don't think you understand, there have been chinese descendents living in Malaysia since at least the 14th century, so how long does someone have to have ancestors in a country before they are considered being from that country?
Are you an inuit? If not, then you're not Alaskan by your logic.
You didn't answer my question so I'll answer it for you. He's ethnic Chinese.
 
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