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Intel - The conductor departs

2012-11-20 07:26:56

Nov 19th 2012, 20:45 by M.G.| SAN FRANCISCO

HUNTING for a new leader in the midst of a brutal battle for market leadership

is hardly ideal. But that is the predicament in which Intel now finds itself.

On November 19th Paul Otellini, the firm s chief executive (pictured),

surprised the industry and investors by announcing that he would retire from

the semiconductor behemoth next May several years before he had been expected

to stand down. The company s board said in a statement that it will consider

both internal and external candidates to fill Mr Otellini s shoes.

Whoever steps into them will have a tough act to follow. Under Mr Otellini s

eight years at Intel s helm, annual revenue rose from $39 billion to $54

billion and earnings-per-share grew from $1.40 to $2.39. But the computing

landscape is changing rapidly, and in ways that threaten Intel s dominant

position in the semiconductor business. The company flourished as part of the

Wintel alliance shorthand for Microsoft s Windows operating system and Intel s

chips, which still power the majority of personal computers. But PC sales have

come under pressure as people have embraced mobile computing devices such as

smartphones and tablet computers.

Both Microsoft and Intel pooh-pooh talk of a post-PC world . But there is

little doubt that the centre of gravity in computing is shifting towards mobile

devices, many of which use power-efficient chips designed by ARM Holdings, a

British firm. It licenses its processor designs to firms such as Qualcomm and

Nvidia, who get the chips made by contract manufacturers such as

GlobalFoundries and TSMC. Qualcomm, which is a good proxy for the ARM

ecosystem, recently saw its market capitalisation exceed that of Intel (which

has three times the revenues of Qualcomm).

Intel still has some impressive strengths, including its prowess in

manufacturing and its formidable track record in research and development. But

it has struggled to get its chips adopted by mobile-device makers. And its

efforts to promote PC sales through new devices, such as super-slim Ultrabooks

that use its chips, have been disappointing. All this may explain why Mr

Otellini is leaving now.

In the past, the company has dipped inside its ranks to find new bosses and it

has some talented executives in its upper echelons, including Stacy Smith, its

finance chief, and Brian Krzanich, its chief operating officer. However, the

fact that the firm s board has said it will consider external candidates

suggests Intel s directors may be looking for someone from the ARM universe to

help guide the firm rather than for a chip off the old Intel block.