Intel has initiated early-stage discussions with Apple regarding potential investment and collaboration, Bloomberg reports citing industry sources. Team Blue has also approached other companies for similar partnership deals, though no agreements are guaranteed. The Business Korea article suggests that Apple will continue with its custom silicon rather than returning to Intel's processor lineup. The report highlights Apple's reliance on TSMC for chip fabrication and Foxconn for assembly operations in Taiwan, China, and India—things that could pose challenges if U.S. tariffs are reintroduced and if domestic manufacturing demands intensify. MarketWatch analysts suggest Apple's interest focuses primarily on Intel's foundry services as an alternative production source. Given Apple's substantial U.S. manufacturing commitments, supporting Intel could improve the company's relationship with Washington policymakers, the outlet indicates.

Apple recently expanded its domestic investment pledge to $600 billion over four years, up from the previous $500 billion commitment announced at a White House event in August, according to Bloomberg. Intel's investment quest has already attracted significant backing. The U.S. government has taken close to a 10% stake in Intel via $10 billion in CHIPS Act funding, while NVIDIA invested $5 billion for a 4% share. Japan's SoftBank contributed $2 billion through its Stargate partnership with OpenAI and Oracle, securing roughly 2%. According to Investopedia, any potential partnership with Apple, particularly one involving foundry investments would reinforce Intel's efforts to reinvigorate its business.

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