Three Intel board members to retire in latest shakeup

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Three Intel board members to retire in latest shakeup

Three Intel board members will not stand for reelection at its 2025 annual meeting, the chipmaker said in a regulatory filing this week, amid a historic transition under newly appointed chief executive Lip-Bu Tan.

Since late last year, the company has been reshuffling its board to make it more chip industry focused as it attempts to reclaim its lost glory under new leadership.

The latest move will shrink the size of the board to 11.

The members retiring include Omar Ishrak, former chief executive of medical device maker Medtronic, who had in January 2023 stepped down as Intel's chairperson but stayed on as a director.

Tsu-Jae King Liu, a dean at the College of Engineering at the University of California, Berkeley, and Risa Lavizzo-Mourey, a former professor of population health and health equity at the University of Pennsylvania, are the others leaving the board.

Meanwhile, Intel bolstered its board through the appointments of Eric Meurice, former chief executive of chipmaking equipment provider ASML, and Steve Sanghi, interim chief executive of Microchip Technology, in December.

The appointments followed the ouster of former chief executive Pat Gelsinger.

The changes mark a departure from Intel's previous board structure, which was populated by leaders in academia and finance, as well as former senior executives from the medical, tech and aerospace industries.

"We are committed to having the right mix of skills, qualifications and technical expertise on the Board," Chairperson Frank Yeary said in the filing .

All other current directors will stand for reelection.

"Equall focused" on product and foundry

Chief executive Tan said in a letter to shareholders that "to enable great products," he was "equally focused" on the company's product business and contract chip manufacturing business - the centre of a turnaround strategy championed by former chief executive Gelsinger.

Gelsinger's total severance payment stands at about US$7.9 million and he has forfeited all his outstanding unvested equity awards, the company said.

Tan, who in August left Intel's board due to disagreements over the company's revival plan, rejoined as a director along with his appointment as chief executive.

"We will remain focused on executing this plan to reduce our operating expenses and capital expenditures, simplify our portfolio and eliminate organizational complexity," Tan said, referring to the cost-savings plan introduced last year under Gelsinger, which included a 15 per cent workforce reduction.

 

 

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