Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC) stock investors received the company’s quarterly earnings report last month, and things went about as expected, which wasn’t great. Net income was down 17% and revenue was down 7% from the previous quarter. But aside from Intel’s numbers, the company is in a battle for mobile relevance, and there are three key areas investors should be specifically watching:
New leadership
With the announcement back in November that CEO Paul Otellini was unexpectedly resigning after holding the position since 2005, the company began its search to find a replacement rather suddenly. Just a few days ago, Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC)’s chief operating officer, Brian Krzanich, was named the CEO, an unsurprising move for a company that always picks its top leader from within, and usually from the COO position.
The company is changing leadership at a critical moment in its history, which could be a good or bad thing. Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC) desperately needs to transition further into mobile and Krzanich may help tip the company in the right direction. Although hiring Krzanich as CEO is less likely to make any waves within the company, investors need to keep an eye on things. Krzanich has been with the company for thirty years, so that offer stability, but Intel desperately needs to move forward in mobile.
Building on current relationships
You don’t become the No. 1 semiconductor company without making some great connections, and Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC)has plenty of them. Although the PC market declined 14% in the Q1 2013 — read: bad news for Intel — the company is still makes processors for one of the only companies doing well in the PC market: Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL).
Some have suggested that Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC) may be able to strike a deal for mobile processors with Apple, but nothing has solidified yet. With Krzanich’s strong manufacturing background, and Intel building processors for a growing number of chip makers, it might be the best time to make Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) an offer it can’t refuse.
The competition
The last (but not least) thing Intel stock investors need to watch is how the company combats its competition. In the baseband market, QUALCOMM, Inc. (NASDAQ:QCOM) dominates with 52% of the market share, MediaTek takes 12.5%, and Intel comes in No. 3 with 12.3%. In addition, Intel is behind the eight ball when it comes to LTE chips. Qualcomm has a dual-mode LTE chip — allowing for both voice and data signals — while Intel plans to launch a dual-mode chip in the first half of this year.