Quick reading
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Intel (INTC) has existing U.S. manufacturing plants, decades of semiconductor experience, tens of thousands of engineers and deep ties to Washington — assets that could accelerate construction of a planned $122 billion SpaceX semiconductor factory much faster than building new facilities from scratch. Nvidia’s (NVDA) data center revenue rose 92% year over year to $75.2 billion last quarter, but supply remains tight as demand outstrips production.
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Musk is positioning SpaceX and its affiliated companies as an AI infrastructure empire that depends on controlling the supply of semiconductors, creating strategic incentives to acquire Intel directly instead of continuing to rely on third-party chip suppliers that could limit autonomous vehicles, AI models and satellite networks.
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The AI arms race in the market is no longer just about chatbots and software. It’s turning into a battle over electricity, data centers and perhaps most importantly: chips. That’s why Elon Musk’s next step after SpaceXThe highly anticipated June 12 IPO may surprise investors. Not another rocket launch. It is not a social media platform. Not even another electric vehicle.
Instead, Musk could eventually decide he needs to directly own a semiconductor giant. And surprisingly, Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) might make more sense than most investors think.
SpaceX IPO is more than rockets
SpaceX is targeting a valuation close to $1.75 trillion in what could become the largest IPO in market history. This figure would instantly place it among the most valuable companies in the world along with NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA), microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), and Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL).
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But the most interesting detail is where the money goes. Reports on the IPO indicate that a large portion of the proceeds will fund semiconductor manufacturing capacity tied to artificial intelligence and aerospace computing needs. The first phase alone could cost up to $122 billion. That figure rivals the annual GDP of entire countries.
SpaceX is already partnering with Intel on parts of the effort. And that partnership is important because maintaining advanced semiconductor factories is notoriously difficult. Intel learned that lesson the hard way after years of allowed manufacturing delays. Semiconductor manufacturing in Taiwan (NYSE:TSM) and Samsung to gain ground.
However, Intel still possesses something that few companies on Earth can quickly replicate:
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Existing US manufacturing plants
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Decades of chip manufacturing experience
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Tens of thousands of semiconductor engineers
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Deep ties with Washington and the Department of Defense
In short, Intel already has infrastructure. Musk may decide he can’t afford to wait years to build it from scratch.
Musk’s AI ambitions continue to expand
Recent reports suggest that Musk has considered combining tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) and SpaceX into a larger tech conglomerate potentially valued at more than $3 trillion. Of course, there is no formal merger proposal today. That said, the strategic logic is becoming easier to see.
Tesla’s self-driving systems require enormous computing power. SpaceX’s Starlink satellite network relies on AI optimization and custom hardware. Musk’s xAI company is building giant data centers packed with GPUs. And Musk’s big plan to colonize Mars will need some way to get around the Red Planet, an environment where there are no fossil fuels. Autonomous electric vehicles are the perfect solution.
In any case, all of these companies share a growing problem: access to chips.
Nvidia currently dominates AI accelerators, but supply remains scarce. Data center revenue increased 92% year over year to $75.2 billion last quarter. Demand continues to outpace supply despite aggressive production increases.
For Musk, relying on third-party suppliers creates risks. He has repeatedly framed the development of AI as an existential competition. If access to advanced semiconductors slows, the entire ecosystem (autonomous vehicles, artificial intelligence models, robotics, satellites and defense systems) slows with it. Buying Intel would change that overnight.
Why a $1 trillion price tag could still apply
At first glance, paying a billion dollars for Intel sounds absurd. The company’s market capitalization, currently $607 billion, has struggled after years of declining market share and manufacturing setbacks. However, strategic acquisitions are rarely based solely on current earnings. They are based on future control.
Here’s what Intel would potentially give Musk:
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Asset
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Strategic value
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American factories
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Independence of the national chip
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Government relations
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Complementary advocacy and grant associations
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Packaging technology
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Faster AI Server Deployment
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Manufacturing labor
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Instant Semiconductor Scale
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Existing facilities
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Years saved versus new construction
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Regardless of how you look at it, time is the critical factor.
Building new cutting-edge factories can take five to seven years and cost tens of billions before a single chip is produced. Intel already has the skeleton in place. Musk could decide that overpaying is cheaper than being left behind.
There is also a political angle that investors should not ignore. The US government has already committed nearly $10 billion to Intel through the CHIPS Act and other initiatives aimed at rebuilding domestic semiconductor manufacturing. A SpaceX-Intel combination would allow President Trump to claim a major victory in American manufacturing while preserving American control over strategic chip capacity.
Key takeaway
In the end, the idea of SpaceX buying Intel for $1 billion sounds far-fetched, until investors examine the incentives. SpaceX is becoming less of a rocket company and more of an AI infrastructure empire. And AI infrastructure increasingly depends on the control of semiconductors.
That doesn’t mean a deal is imminent. Intel would be expensive, politically sensitive and operationally complex. But surprisingly, the logic behind this keeps getting stronger.
For astute investors, the most important lesson may not be whether Musk buys Intel. It’s understanding that the winners of the next decade may be the companies that control both the AI software and the physical hardware that powers it.
Don’t wait: The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just revealed his top 10 AI stocks. See the full list for FREE now.