Citi Hikes Intel Price Target to $130: The Agentic CPU Boom Reshapes the Story

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By David Moadel Published

Quick Read

  • Intel (INTC) received a price target raise from Citi to $130 from $95, based on a new CPU total addressable market framework that includes agentic AI workloads growing 185% annually and driving the overall CPU market to 35% annual growth to $132B by 2030.

  • CPUs are gaining strategic importance in the AI stack as orchestration layers for autonomous agents, positioning Intel as a structural beneficiary of the next compute cycle beyond GPU-centric architectures.

  • The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks. Get them here FREE.

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Citi Hikes Intel Price Target to $130: The Agentic CPU Boom Reshapes the Story

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Citi just made a bold reassessment of the CPU story in the AI era. Analyst Atif Malik raised the firm’s price target on Intel to $130 from $95 and kept a Buy rating on Intel (NASDAQ:INTC | INTC Price Prediction), citing an entirely new total addressable market framework built around agentic CPU workloads. For long-term investors, the call reframes Intel stock as more than a turnaround trade. It positions the chipmaker as a structural beneficiary of the next AI compute cycle.

The price target raise lands as Intel shares trade near $107. The stock has staged a dramatic recovery off of last year’s lows.

Ticker Company Firm Action Old Rating New Rating Old Target New Target
INTC Intel Citi Price Target Raised Buy Buy $95 $130

The Analyst’s Case

Citi introduced a new CPU total addressable market model that includes general purpose CPUs, AI head nodes, and agentic CPU applications. Under that framework, the firm now sees the CPU market growing 35% annually to $132 billion by 2030, driven by 185% annual agentic CPU growth.

The agentic CPU concept matters because autonomous AI agents generate massive orchestration and inference workloads that lean heavily on CPUs, not just GPUs. CEO Lip-Bu Tan made the same case on Intel’s last call, asserting that “the CPU now serves as the orchestration layer and critical control plane for the entire AI stack.” Citi published a parallel TAM model for Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:AMD), lifting its price target on AMD to $460.

Company Snapshot

Intel posted Q1 FY2026 revenue of $13.58 billion, up 7% year over year, with non-GAAP EPS of $0.29. The Data Center and AI (DCAI) segment grew 22% to $5.05 billion, while Intel Foundry revenue rose 16% to $5.42 billion.

Management’s Q2 FY2026 guidance calls for revenue of $13.8 billion to $14.8 billion with non-GAAP gross margin near 39%. Strategic wins include Xeon 6 selection as host CPU for NVIDIA‘s (NASDAQ:NVDA) DGX Rubin NVL8 systems and a multiyear Google collaboration.

Why the Move Matters Now

Intel stock has rallied sharply, with shares up 190% year to date and 395% over the past year. The valuation reflects forward optimism, with a forward P/E ratio of 156x against a 52-week range of $18.96 to $132.75.

The bulls point to U.S. government backing, foundry milestones (Intel 18A ramped to high-volume manufacturing), and a CPU-led AI angle finally getting analyst credit. The bears note that consensus remains cautious, with the average analyst target sitting at $85 and 30 Hold ratings on file. Execution risk, ongoing share losses to Advanced Micro Devices, and distant foundry profitability remain real overhangs.

What It Means for Your Portfolio

Citi’s call gives prudent investors a credible framework for why Intel could grow into its rally rather than fade from it. The agentic CPU thesis is testable: watch for whether DCAI growth accelerates and whether 18A yields scale on schedule.

For prudent investors, position sizing matters more than conviction. Intel stock now carries both turnaround momentum and AI-cycle exposure, but the gap between Citi’s $130 target and the broader Wall Street consensus underscores that this remains a contested name. A measured allocation captures the upside without overcommitting to a thesis still in proof phase.

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About the Author David Moadel →

David Moadel is financial writer specializing in stocks, ETFs, options, precious metals, and Bitcoin. David has written well over 1,000 articles for leading online publications, helping investors understand markets, income strategies, and risk.

His work has appeared in The Motley Fool, InvestorPlace, U.S. News & World Report, TipRanks, ValueWalk, Benzinga, Market Realist, TalkMarkets, Finmasters, 24/7 Wall St., and others.

With a master’s degree in education, David has taught at the elementary, high school, and college levels. That teaching background shapes his writing style: clear, educational, and practical. David has also built a loyal social-media audience by providing trustworthy financial content on YouTube, X/Twitter, and StockTwits.

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