Intel Insiders Sell, TSMC CEO Buys & Micron's $100B Lock-In cover art

Intel Insiders Sell, TSMC CEO Buys & Micron's $100B Lock-In

Intel Insiders Sell, TSMC CEO Buys & Micron's $100B Lock-In

Listen for free

View show details
(00:00:00) Intel Insiders Sell, TSMC CEO Buys & Micron's $100B Lock-In
(00:00:52) TSMC Insider Buying Contrast
(00:01:39) Micron Memory Lock-In Through 2030
(00:02:27) Nvidia Ecosystem as National Security Moat
(00:03:03) Nine Bottlenecks Beyond the GPU
(00:03:32) Export Controls and ASML Friction
(00:04:15) Key Watchpoints for Next Session

Insider behavior is the sharpest signal in this episode. Intel's CFO and foundry general manager are net sellers of Intel stock even as the share price sits up over 500% year-on-year — a clear pricing-in of doubt on the foundry turnaround thesis. Meanwhile, TSMC CEO C.C. Wei bought shares three separate times between April and June, with May revenue up 31% year-on-year and operating margin at 58%. Bank of America just raised its TSMC price target to $590. The behavioral divergence between these two foundry stories is as clean as it gets.

Micron adds a structural dimension. Adjusted gross margin hit 84.9% last quarter — higher than Nvidia and Meta — and the company has signed 16 strategic customer agreements worth roughly $100 billion through 2030 on take-or-pay terms. CEO Sanjay Mehrotra sees HBM supply tightness persisting beyond 2027. The cyclical memory narrative is being replaced by a structural supply constraint story.

Nvidia's Jensen Huang reframed the export control conversation at the June 24 shareholder meeting: smuggled chips can't access Nvidia's software stack or support updates, making the moat self-enforcing. Sophisticated AI investors are now rotating toward infrastructure bottlenecks — power, HBM, optical interconnect, advanced packaging, and grid capacity — rather than pure GPU exposure.

On geopolitics, the Netherlands is pushing back against the MATCH Act, which would extend EUV restrictions to DUV machines, threatening 19% of ASML's net system sales. Separately, Anthropic alleges Alibaba extracted nearly 29 million exchanges from Claude via fraudulent accounts. The circumvention economy is scaling. Watchpoints: Intel Q2 foundry margin, Micron contract durability, and MATCH Act progress.

This episode includes AI-generated content.
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
No reviews yet