Intel Foundry Services Head Stu Pann explains company's plan to build Arm chips, move more manufacturing to the U.S.

Intel Stu Pann and Foundry (composite image)
(Image credit: Intel)

Intel’s previous struggles to develop new process node technologies resulted in the company eventually ceding its semiconductor manufacturing advantage to its rival TSMC. In the years since, Intel has worked to reverse that deficit with CEO Pat Gelsinger’s audacious turnaround plan, which hinges on delivering five new process nodes in four years. Critically, the plan also hinges on pivoting the company to a new IDM 2.0 philosophy that includes creating a third-party foundry, Intel Foundry Services (IFS), that produces chips for external companies while also allowing the company to retain the inherent advantages of being an IDM.

Intel’s revitalization requires hundreds of billions of dollars in investments that span the globe as it builds out additional chipmaking and packaging capacity to fuel IFS, an organization helmed by Stu Pann, the SVP and GM of Intel Foundry Services, who is tasked with making IFS the world’s second-largest foundry by 2030. 

IFS Direct Connect will generate plenty of news around new developments, but today, we have an interesting question and answer session with Stu Pann to discuss several of the latest IFS developments. Pann also spoke about some of the company’s not-yet-disclosed future plans -- but we’ll have to add those additional comments after the embargo lifts tomorrow. 

Stu Pann: I think it's hugely important. If you look at where Arm is at today with the current Neoverse lineup, they're powering all the hyperscalers and TSMC runs those wafers. If we're going to play in that market, we have to have a strong relationship with Arm, and the Faraday announcement that we did with their server infrastructure team is proof that we want to do this kind of business. 

Just the fact that [Arm CEO] Rene Haas and I are going to be on stage talking about the Arm partnership at an Intel conference with 1,100 people in attendance - that’s proof positive that we're serious about doing this business. You can't really go back on this kind of stuff. We're committed, and we're going to move forward. We recognize that Arm has won a lot of sockets, and we want to work with them closely to make sure that whatever they do with Neoverse is optimized for 18A. And expect Rene to say more on that next week [at the event]. 

Stu Pann: Absolutely. […] You can't do it just by yourself; you have to do it with an EDA partner. So, our investment with Synopsys and our investment with Cadence absolutely allows for that kind of customization, should a customer want it, but they have to commit to it. It'll be a mutual commitment to go forward. Absolutely, we're open to that. 

People mix and match -- I don't want our customers to have to choose to do something differently with a different flow. I’d rather make it easy and friction-free for them to say, “Ok, I can use this place and route from Cadence, and this IP from Synopsys,” or whatever configuration they want. We want to make sure it's available, and we're able to do that fully on 18A. 

Paul Alcorn: Speaking of building capacity brings us to the CHIPs Act. It feels like the US government is taking its time with the subsidies; it's taken a lot longer than most people expected. How instrumental do you think that is as a booster for IFS?

Stu Pann: It's hugely important to us. We’ve worked closely with the CHIPS office. Pat was personally responsible, I think more so than any American executive, in making the CHIPS Act a reality. Since its inception, we've been in the middle of this. 

This is the biggest piece of industrial policy legislation since World War Two. They’re building the plane as they're flying it right now. And we're hopeful we can conclude some level of agreement with them, but it'll conclude when it concludes. Secretary Raimondo will be the one who says, ‘Okay, I'm now ready to talk about it.’ But the fact that she is coming to the event says that she wants to talk about Intel's role for the US and its allies in terms of being a national champion for US semiconductors. That was the message she delivered on Cramer’s broadcast four or five weeks ago. We'll see what she says next week. But she is keenly interested in making sure that the most important semiconductor supplier in the United States is helped by this effort.

Stu Pann: Yeah, during the earnings call, we announced that we had a billion-dollar reward from the US government in terms of supplying advanced semiconductors to the DoD. Where they go, and what they do, we obviously would never talk about, but they don't make a billion-dollar commitment without serious research and serious commitment. Not only on their part, but on the part of the defense industrial base. 

If you look at RAMP-C, Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman are a part of it, and Boeing has expressed an interest. All the defense industrial base right now is looking at RAMP-C and what it means very carefully. And in fact, we actually have a government session the day after Foundry Day, just for those customers because they have a very specific set of requirements. So that's been a big deal for us, just for establishing us as a mainstream supplier of the US government in a lot of different applications. 

One of the DoD senior scientists said this kind of capability gives our soldiers an asymmetric advantage on the battlefield because they're now able to use leading-edge technology versus technology that’s ten years old. So, the DoD has been a huge booster because they want this capability for our soldiers and our troops protecting the US national interests.

Stu Pann: I can't. I am aware of the rumor. In this business, especially now, our customers are asking for confidentiality; they don't want to disclose. They will decide when and where they want to disclose and what they'll disclose. I’m not speaking with Nvidia in mind, but just generically – all the customers feel that way. When they're ready to talk, they will talk, and they will let us know when they're going to talk. I would love to be more visible, but I also have to respect what they want.

A lot of customers want at least a ‘Made in the Americas’ kind of setup. And if we do a wafer fab in the US for an 18A logic device, for example, we can package something in the Americas in its entirety without having to have it cross the Pacific Ocean. Now, having said that, we’ll do packaging in Malaysia and obviously open up packaging in Poland over time. So, it'll be resilient, but if you want to dictate a certain flow, if we can make it work in our network, we're sure going to try.

Stu Pann: I hired the guy that did that program a while ago. We're going to have a slide about that in my deck, which will describe our answer to OIP. The fact that we have 33 ecosystem vendors who have booths everywhere [at the event], it’s just like the duty-free shops in the airport -- you have to walk past all that to get to the main stage.

Paul Alcorn: We’re starting to see a lot of fab build-outs in China, primarily around mature nodes, and a lot of CAPEX is going into that. A lot of industry leaders have signaled an increasing alarm. I think Secretary Raimondo herself has said they're worried about China flooding the market with mature chips. I know in the sphere of big foundry players with extensive mature node capacity, like TSMC or maybe GlobalFoundries, that could potentially really hurt. What about for IFS? How do you think this impacts IFS and its competitive position?

At the end of the day, the mature factories in China are just that -- they're in China. They’re not here. So we can be decently competitive on a cost basis. Now, if they do other methods of pricing, what can we do? But once again, they're in China, not in the US. Tower and UMC do a lot of business with US multinationals, so that’s the play for us. Now, competing with China inside of China? That would be a tough one - but we're not there.

Paul Alcorn
Editor-in-Chief

Paul Alcorn is the Editor-in-Chief for Tom's Hardware US. He also writes news and reviews on CPUs, storage, and enterprise hardware.

  • brandonjclark
    This is a fantastic article and I think you've done a great job interviewing, Paul. Thanks to Stu for the time.
    Reply
  • Diogene7
    I wish we got some information of some post silicon CMOS technology like spintronics related technology.

    At this stage, spintronics technology seems to have more and more potential advantages (MRAM, p-bit computing, Intel MESO concept,…) and I will be strongly interested to hear about for example the advancement of implementing MRAM in HVM in Intel Foundries…

    Probably need the financial support of the DoD / DARPA to shoulder the large upfront premium cost to kickstart real HVM of this technology…
    Reply