

Intel, chips and America’s future
23 snips Aug 13, 2025
Kyle Harrison, a general partner at Contrary Capital and co-author of the report "Building an American TSMC," discusses the precarious state of U.S. chip manufacturing. He highlights Intel's struggles and the necessity of innovation to reclaim a competitive edge. The conversation delves into the barriers to entry in the semiconductor market, the importance of skilled labor, and the urgent need for America to safeguard its technological capabilities amid rising global tensions.
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Intel Is America’s Last Best Hope For Leading-Edge Chips
- Intel remains the last U.S. company with a realistic shot at cutting-edge chip fabrication despite repeated strategic failures.
- That unique position makes Intel a geopolitical flashpoint as AI demand and Taiwan tensions rise.
Strategic Misses Left Intel Exposed
- Intel missed major strategic shifts (mobile, contract fabs, custom accelerators) and let rivals capture profitable niches.
- Losing Intel would remove the only plausible domestic fallback for advanced fabrication in a crisis.
Short-Term Finance Culture Sabotaged Long-Term Tech Leadership
- Intel's management choices and shareholder-primed financialism hollowed out engineering capacity and R&D investment.
- That cultural shift directly contributed to process delays like the 10nm failure and falling behind TSMC.