Intel Corp's (NASDAQ: INTC) turnaround has become one of Wall Street's favorite semiconductor trades. The stock has more than doubled this year as investors bet the company can reclaim its manufacturing edge and emerge as a major AI winner. JPMorgan, however, thinks the rally may have already priced in a recovery that still needs to be proven.
The Turnaround Everyone Is Betting On
Intel's resurgence has been driven less by what the company has already accomplished and more by what investors believe it can become.
The market has embraced the idea that Intel can rebuild its foundry business, attract major third-party chip customers and regain relevance in an AI-driven semiconductor industry. That optimism has helped make the stock one of this year's strongest performers.
JPMorgan isn't convinced those expectations match today's fundamentals.
In its latest Top Short Ideas report for the third quarter, the bank named Intel among its highest-conviction tactical and structural short ideas across the U.S. market. The list also includes names spanning multiple sectors, from Moderna, Inc. (NASDAQ: MRNA) and Avis Budget Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: CAR) to AI infrastructure player IREN Limited (NASDAQ: IREN) and website builder Wix.Com Ltd. (NASDAQ: WIX).
Why JPMorgan Thinks the Rally Has Gone Too Far
The bank's thesis isn't that Intel lacks a turnaround strategy.
Instead, semiconductor analyst Harlan Sur argues investors are already valuing Intel as though that turnaround has largely succeeded.
According to JPMorgan, Intel's foundry business still generates only minimal external customer revenue, continues to post deeply negative margins and has yet to demonstrate broad third-party customer adoption. Meanwhile, the company's traditional client and server processor businesses continue to lose market share.
In other words, JPMorgan believes the stock reflects tomorrow's success while many of the operational milestones remain works in progress.
A Broader Theme Across JPMorgan's Short List
Intel isn't the only company on JPMorgan's list where expectations appear to be running ahead of execution.
The bank warned that increasing competition from providers with larger GPU capacity could pressure pricing for AI cloud infrastructure company IREN, while it argued AI-native website builders are beginning to chip away at Wix's competitive moat by shifting users toward lower-margin AI products.
The common thread isn't weak businesses. It's JPMorgan's view that investors may have become too optimistic about how quickly these companies can deliver on their long-term narratives.
What Investors Should Watch
For Intel, the next chapter of the turnaround won't be written by AI headlines alone.
Investors will likely be looking for evidence that the company's foundry business can attract meaningful external customers, improve profitability and stabilize its core PC and server franchises.
Until then, JPMorgan believes the stock's remarkable rally may have moved faster than the fundamentals.