Intel and Apple: The Chip Deal That Shook the Market in 2026

Intel surges, SpaceX falls for the third straight session, and Apple becomes a key player in the AI chip war. Understand what changed and why it matters.

by Cleverson Gouvêa

Intel and Apple: The Chip Deal That Shook the Market in 2026

The partnership between Intel and Apple dominated financial news in June 2026 and shook the entire tech market. While Intel's stock soared to an all-time high, newly listed SpaceX fell for the third consecutive session. Two opposite moves, one root cause: the billion-dollar race to manufacture the chips that power artificial intelligence.

TL;DR

  • On June 18, 2026, Trump announced that Apple would work with Intel to design and manufacture chips in the US.
  • Intel's stock (INTC) jumped about 9% in pre-market and closed at a record, accumulating a 464% gain over 12 months.
  • SpaceX (SPCX) fell for the third straight session after its record IPO, but still held a significant gain over its debut price.
  • Nvidia and the TerraFab project, linked to Elon Musk, also appear as potential clients for Intel's factory.
  • Neither Apple nor Intel officially confirmed the deal — which calls for caution in interpretation.

What Trump announced about Intel and Apple

On June 18, 2026, US President Donald Trump posted on Truth Social that "finally, Apple has agreed to work with Intel to design and build its chips in America." The short phrase was enough to ignite trading.

The market's reading was straightforward: if the iPhone maker starts using Intel's foundries to produce some of its processors on US soil, Intel gains an anchor client the size of Apple — and validates, once and for all, the company's riskiest bet of the past decade.

A warning upfront: as of that session's close, neither Apple nor Intel had publicly confirmed the deal's details. According to the Wall Street Journal, the two companies had reached a preliminary understanding in May 2026, after over a year of talks. A political announcement and a signed contract, however, are not the same thing — and serious investors know that.

Why Intel's stock surged

The market reacted with euphoria. Intel's stock (ticker INTC) rose about 9% in pre-market, hitting $131.60, and closed at a record near $134. To understand the magnitude, some numbers help.

Indicator Number
INTC pre-market gain ~9%
Record closing price ~$134
12-month appreciation 464%
Approximate market cap $608 billion
US government stake ~10% (acquired in 2025)

The central point is the CEO. Since Lip-Bu Tan took the helm in early 2025, Intel has pursued a clear strategy: open its factories to external clients, in the foundry model that Taiwan's TSMC dominated. Instead of producing only its own chips, Intel began selling itself as a manufacturing service provider for third parties.

This pivot requires billions in investment and, crucially, large clients to justify the risk. That's exactly where Apple's name comes in as the missing credibility seal. The US government's roughly 10% stake acquired in 2025 reinforces the strategic nature — Washington treats Intel as a national security asset, not just a tech company.

SpaceX falls for the third session: the other side of the coin

In the same market environment, SpaceX's story went the opposite direction. After a record IPO — with a debut price of $135 per share and a rally of nearly 50% in the first few days — Elon Musk's company strung together losing sessions and fell for the third consecutive day.

Before anyone reads this as a collapse: even after the negative streak, SpaceX still held a gain of over 40% from its IPO price and ranked among the world's most valuable companies, with a market cap around $2.5 trillion. The decline occurred partly amid profit-taking and a broad market downturn — the S&P 500 fell 1.2% and the Nasdaq 100 dropped 1% in the same session.

A technical detail explains the volatility: SpaceX went public with a free float of only 4.2%. With so few shares circulating, any buying or selling flow moves the price excessively. Not coincidentally, SpaceX options contracts became the third most traded asset in the US market, behind only Tesla and Nvidia.

What connects the two ends

Intel rising and SpaceX falling on the same day seems contradictory, but it tells the same story from different angles: money rotating within the tech sector. Capital moved from already highly valued (and volatile) positions like SpaceX into a turnaround thesis with a concrete political catalyst (Intel). It's portfolio rotation, not the end of a cycle.

TerraFab, Nvidia, and the race for chips in the US

The Intel and Apple announcement didn't come alone. Trump also stated that Nvidia had agreed to produce advanced chips through Intel and mentioned the TerraFab project, linked to Elon Musk, as another potential client for US factories.

If these three names — Apple, Nvidia, and Musk's ecosystem — truly anchor Intel's foundry operation, the strategic picture becomes clear:

  • Apple reduces dependence on Taiwan and gains a domestic supplier.
  • Nvidia secures additional capacity for AI chips amid chronic shortage.
  • TerraFab/Musk enters as a long-term client in a US capacity project.
  • Intel turns idle factories into recurring revenue and dilutes investment risk.

The backdrop is insatiable demand for AI infrastructure. The PHLX Semiconductor Index (Philadelphia) had already accumulated a gain of about 90% for the year, signaling that the market sees chipmakers as the true owners of the infrastructure behind every language model and data center. Those who read our analysis on Huawei's AI chips and the arrival of cloud in Brazil already understand that semiconductor sovereignty has become a geopolitical issue, not just a technical one.

The concentration risk in Taiwan and TSMC

Why would Apple, which has always relied on TSMC, make room for Intel? The answer is one word: concentration. Today, the vast majority of cutting-edge chips — the same ones that power the iPhone's A20 Pro and Nvidia's GPUs — come from TSMC factories in Taiwan.

It's a dangerous geographic dependency. Tensions in the region, logistical risks, and US political pressure for domestic production push giants to seek a second supplier. For Apple, having a US-based alternative means resilience: if something stalls in Taiwan, the production line doesn't stop completely.

Here, a dose of technical realism is needed. Manufacturing cutting-edge chips isn't like flipping a switch. It requires years of process calibration, competitive yield, and maturity that TSMC took decades to achieve. Intel may win the contract and the political announcement, but delivering volume with quality is another step — and a much longer one. For those following Apple's own chip roadmap, it's worth revisiting what we know about the iPhone 18's 2nm A20 Pro chip: the manufacturing bar Apple demands is extremely high.

Intel vs. SpaceX: two moves, a comparative table

To organize what happened, it's worth placing the two assets side by side:

Criteria Intel (INTC) SpaceX (SPCX)
Move in the period Up (~9% pre-market, record) Down for 3rd straight session
Main trigger Announcement of Apple deal Profit-taking after IPO
Recent cumulative +464% in 12 months +40% from IPO of $135
Key risk Executing the foundry in practice Low free float (4.2%) and volatility
Role in AI thesis Chip manufacturer (infrastructure) Connectivity and capacity (Musk)

The table highlights the contrast: one asset reacts to a future revenue catalyst; the other breathes after an euphoric debut. Neither invalidates the broader AI thesis — both are chapters of it.

What this means for those building with AI in Brazil

You don't trade on a New York exchange, so why does this move matter for your company? Because the price and availability of computing capacity define the cost of everything that runs on AI — from a customer service chatbot to an agent that qualifies leads.

Three practical implications for the Brazilian market:

  1. Inference cost. More chip factories mean, in the medium term, more GPU supply and potential price relief for running models. Today, scarcity makes everything expensive.
  2. Risk diversification. Companies that depend on a single cloud or a single AI provider should think like Apple: having a Plan B reduces fragility.
  3. Adoption speed. The cheaper and more abundant the infrastructure, the faster AI features reach everyday products.

This is the backdrop that makes AI agents increasingly viable for businesses: the infrastructure supporting these agents is literally being built now — in Oregon, Arizona, and perhaps with Apple's name on the contract. In practice, today's chip war defines tomorrow's automation price.

Risks and what is not yet confirmed

No honest analysis ends without asterisks. After more than 15 years following technology cycles, I've learned to distrust headlines that are too good. Some points warrant caution:

  • The deal was not confirmed by the companies. The announcement came from a political post, not an official joint statement from Apple and Intel.
  • Executing is different from announcing. Delivering cutting-edge chips in volume with good yield can take years.
  • Volatility is the rule, not the exception. Both Intel's rally and SpaceX's decline can reverse quickly — low free float amplifies both sides.
  • Investment decisions require due diligence. Nothing here is a buy or sell recommendation; it's a technology landscape reading.

The goal of this article is not to predict stock prices, but to explain why the AI chip board moved — and what it reveals about the infrastructure underpinning the next decade of software.

Conclusion: the game is infrastructure

The move by Intel and Apple and SpaceX's decline on the same trading day tell the same truth from opposite angles: artificial intelligence doesn't live on brilliant models alone — it depends on who manufactures the silicon. In 2026, winning this dispute became a matter of corporate strategy and national sovereignty at the same time.

For Brazilian companies, the lesson is less about buying stocks and more about understanding the foundation: the cost of your automation tomorrow is being decided in chip factories today. At Agathas Web, we help businesses turn this infrastructure into real products — from service agents to AI integrations. If you want to get ahead of this cycle, talk to us and let's design the next step.

Sources consulted: CNBC, Exame and InfoMoney.