Inside Intel's Deal With the U.S. Government

英特尔与美国政府的交易内幕

The Journal.

2025-08-28

19 分钟
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The U.S. government is taking a 10% stake in Intel, a deal that caps a two-week frenzy for the troubled chip maker and marks the latest in a series of extraordinary private-sector interventions by President Trump. WSJ’s Robbie Whelan peels back the curtain on the unprecedented deal and shares details from the Oval Office meeting between Intel and the Trump administration. Jessica Mendoza hosts.   Further Listening: - How Intel’s CEO Became a Political Liability- Is American Capitalism in Retreat?- The Nvidia CEO’s Quest to Sell Chips to ChinaSign up for WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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  • For the past few weeks, Intel, the American chips company, has been on a roller coaster.

  • Our colleague Robbie Whelan has been covering it.

  • It's really been a wild and crazy ride, and I'm happy to tell you all about it.

  • It started earlier this month with a post from President Trump calling for Intel CEO Lip Bhutan to resign over business ties in China.

  • It says the CEO of Intel is highly conflicted,

  • capital letters conflicted, and must resign immediately.

  • Tan quickly tried to put out the fire,

  • flying to Washington to meet with the president in the Oval Office.

  • And they have this like hour-long meeting where he basically says,

  • look, my ties to China are in the past.

  • About a week later, Intel announced a major deal with the Trump administration.

  • Friday was like the culmination of a total rollercoaster ride for Intel.

  • And I said, I think it would be good having the United States as your partner.

  • He agreed, and they've agreed to do it.

  • Under the agreement, the U.S. government becomes a partial owner of Intel.

  • It's getting a 10% stake in the company.

  • And Robbie has the inside story on how it all went down.

  • And President Trump, kind of like in a half-joking, half-serious way,

  • said, Maybe I should put my signature on these papers, too.

  • I've actually seen the papers.