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Intel Profit Jumps; Beats Estimates

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Intel Profit Jumps; Beats Estimates

 INTC: Latest Quote & News

SANTA CLARA (AP) ― Intel Corp.'s second-quarter profit jumped 25 percent as blossoming sales of laptop chips helped the company cruise past Wall Street's estimates Tuesday.

Investors viewed the chip maker's favorable results as a sign that global PC demand is healthy despite a sputtering U.S. economy that has depressed some domestic spending. Intel CEO Paul Otellini said demand for Intel's chips remains strong "in all segments and all parts of the globe." Three-quarters of Intel's business is outside the U.S.

Intel shares rose 21 cents to $20.92 in after-hours trading. They had risen 24 cents, or 1.2 percent, to $20.71 in the regular session before the Santa Clara-based company reported its results.

Intel said its net income was $1.6 billion, or 28 cents per share, in the three-month period ending June 28.

That was 3 cents per share higher than what analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial were expecting. It was a 25 percent jump from the $1.28 billion, or 22 cents per share, that Intel earned a year ago.

Intel is profiting from surging global demand for laptops and the processors that power them, though lower prices for some of the fastest-growing models drove down Intel's closely watched average selling price in the latest quarter.

However, Intel can absorb the trend easier than smaller rival Advanced Micro Devices Inc. because Intel has made a faster switch to a new manufacturing process that lowers the cost of making each chip.

Intel is the world's No. 1 supplier of microprocessors, the electronic brains of personal computers. Intel commands about 80 percent of the market, with AMD owning roughly the other 20 percent.

Intel has been taking market share from AMD in recent quarters with a more robust product lineup. Meanwhile, AMD has been hurt by lengthy product delays and the substantial debt it took on to finance its $5.6 billion acquisition of graphics chip maker ATI Technologies, a deal done to bolster AMD's competitiveness in graphics.

Intel was hurt in the second quarter by its investment in a type of memory called NOR flash, which is widely used in cell phones but isn't as popular as another type of memory called NAND flash and used in gadgets like iPods and digital cameras. Intel said its revenues from NOR flash were "significantly lower" in the latest quarter.

Intel's sales set a record at $9.5 billion, up 9 percent over last year and $150 million higher than analysts' forecasts.

Some analysts' expectations were subdued on fears about whether Intel's core business would be hurt by the ailing U.S. economy. They could be reassured that Intel's sales forecast for the current quarter was in line with Wall Street's predictions.

Intel is projecting between $10 billion and $10.6 billion in sales for the third quarter.

(© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)