Intel published its fourth quarter financial results on Thursday, beating earnings expectations and setting new annual revenue records for every business segment. Still, revenues for the fourth quarter of FY 2018 fell below market expectations. Guidance for the next quarter was also lighter than expected.
For Q4 2018, non-GAAP earnings per share came to $1.28 on revenue of $18.7 billion, up 9 percent year-over-year
Wall Street was looking for earnings of $1.22 per share on revenue of $19.01 billion.
For the full fiscal year, revenue set a record of $70.8 billion, up 13 percent year-over-year.
“2018 was a truly remarkable year for Intel with record revenue in every business segment and record profits as we transform the company to pursue our biggest market opportunity ever,” Intel CFO and Interim CEO Bob Swan said in a statement. “In the fourth quarter, we grew revenue, expanded earnings and previewed new 10nm-based products that position Intel to compete and win going forward. Looking ahead, we are forecasting another record year and raising the dividend based on our view that the explosive growth of data will drive continued demand for Intel products.”
Must read
Intel says it closed its pay gap globally CNET
How Intel closed the gender pay gap for employees TechRepublic
The board of directors approved a 5 percent increase in Intel’s cash dividend to $1.26 per-share on an annual basis.The board declared a quarterly dividend of $0.315 per-share on the company’s common stock.
Inte’ls PC-centric business (CCG) brought in $9.8 billion in Q4. That’s up 10 percent year-over-year, thanks to continued strong demand for Intel’s higher performance products and strength in commercial and gaming, the company said. For the full year, revenue was up 9 percent year-over-year to $37 billion.

Collectively, Intel’s data-centric businesses grew 9 percent year-over-year in Q4 to $6.1 billion. The segment grew 20 percent YoY in 2018 to $23 billion. In the fourth quarter, DCG achieved 24 percent cloud segment growth and 12 percent communications service provider segment growth, while enterprise revenue declined 5 percent.
Q4 Internet of Things Group (IOTG) revenue declined 7 percent YoY to $816 million. However, excluding Wind River, which Intel divested in the second quarter, revenue was up 4 percent YoY despite supply tightness. For the full year, revenue in the segment was up 9 percent to $3.5 billion.
Record quarterly revenue in Intel’s memory business (NSG) was $1.1 billion, up 25 percent YoY. For the year, it was up 22 percent to $4.3 billion. Intel’s Programmable Solutions Group (PSG) also achieved record quarterly revenue of $612 million, up 8 percent YoY driven by strength in the data center and communications market segments. Mobileye’s Q4 revenue of $183 million was up 43 percent YoY as customer momentum continued.
For the first quarter of fiscal 2019, Intel is expecting revenue of approximately $16 billion. Analysts are expecting revenue of $17.37 billion.
More Tech Earnings
Adobe reports mixed Q4 results, updates outlook to include Marketo
Most home routers don’t take advantage of Linux’s improved security features
LG Electronics warns of fourth quarter profit slump
Macy’s reports weak holiday sales, drags down retail sector
Atlassian surpassed $1B in calendar-year revenue in 2018
Related Topics:
Intel
Hardware
ARM
Artificial Intelligence
Innovation