This is why Intel plunked down $15 billion for a car tech company - and why it should make investors nervous
On Monday, the company revealed its answer: cars.
Intel is spending a whopping $15.3 billion, the second largest acquisition ever in its 50-year history, to buy self-driving car tech company Mobileye.
If self-driving vehicles are going to be the future, as Uber, Alphabet, and others believe they will be, Intel wants to sell the bits that make it happen.
Just as PCs were once all adorned with the reassuring "Intel Inside" stickers, the chipmaker is betting that it can gain a similar foothold inside another product that sells tens of millions of units ever year.
"It's important now, because if you take a look at what you're doing, talking about car models in 2020, 2021, and so we need to get in there, we need to get this platform developers, brought to them, and have that confidence so that we can really influence the real start of autonomous driving in that time frame," Intel CEO Brian Krzanich said on CNBC following the announcement of the deal.
Intel has a history of buying up companies to plug holes in its business: From 1997 to 2002, Intel went on a rampage, buying up around 40 companies both during and after the dot-com bubble. Even later on, Intel signed mega-deals like 2010's purchase of security company McAfee for $7.68 billion.
The problem is that while Intel should be applauded for trying to move its business into new areas, the company has a lousy track record when it comes to acquisitions. That could be part of the reason why Intel stock is down almost 2% at the time of writing, below the market.
A series of unfortunate events
Intel's dotcom shopping spree was kind of a fiasco, with the company spending billions on companies like Wind River and Dialogic trying to break into the smartphone market. But Intel struggled to gain a foothold in the early market, and ended up taking a $600 million writeoff in its wireless business - and ended up selling much of its mobile business to Marvell for the same amount in 2006.
In 2010, Intel bought the wireless business unit from Infineon, which manufactured processors in the first several iPhone models, for $1.4 billion, in a move that was supposed to finally give the company a major play in smartphones. Not long after, Apple switched to chips from competitor Qualcomm, raining on Intel's parade. It was only last year that reports held that Apple was turning to Intel for wireless modem hardware for new iPhones.
And some of its acquisitions were just plain weird, like that McAfee acquisition, which never really seemed to fit into the company's core processor business. It basically cut the value of the company by nearly half over the course of six years, culminating that Intel announced it was spinning off a majority stake of McAfee in a $4.2 billion deal.
The bull case
On CNBC this morning, Krzanich made the argument that Mobileye will be different, saying that he needs to convince investors that Intel's play here is around the "visual data" that self-driving cars can collect.
"The next data revolution will be visual data. Those cars see the world. And so as we're looking for things, as visual data becomes important, that is a new whole business and new whole regime of data management that is going to become available," Krzanich said.
And tactically, Krzanich claims that he has a solid track record of rehabilitating Intel's troubled acquisitions, and led McAfee Intel Security to profitability ahead of the spinoff. He says that he's going to repeat the playbook there of having leadership that reports directly to him, with CEO Ziv Aviram staying in command of Mobileye.
While Mobileye is certainly Intel's biggest investment in diversifying its business past the PC, it's not alone. Over the last few years, Intel has invested heavily in stuff like drones, virtual reality, and the so-called "Internet of Things."
But given Intel's lousy M&A track record and its challenges expanding beyond PC and server processors, the burden is on Krzanich to prove the naysayers wrong.