The installation of new CEO Lip-Bu Tan at chip stock Intel ($INTC) was supposed to be a turning point. But as it turns out, it is leaving behind a new
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Scooped by
Richard Platt
onto Internet of Things - Company and Research Focus April 12, 5:38 AM
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The installation of new CEO Lip-Bu Tan at Intel was supposed to be a turning point. But as it turns out, it is leaving behind a new wake of uncertainty that is prompting concern. Apparently, Tan has a wide range of investments, many of which are in China…and some of which are even connected to the Chinese military. This was bad news as far as investors were concerned, and Intel shares plummeted over 7.5% in Thursday afternoon’s trading. Given that Tan put up $25 million of his own money to invest in Intel when he took the CEO slot, it should come as little surprise that he had substantial investments to begin with. Tan’s investments, reports noted, included “hundreds of Chinese tech firms.” The biggest surprise, though, was that at least 8 of these firms had direct ties to the People’s Liberation Army, the Chinese military. A review from Reuters found that Tan actually controls +40 Chinese companies outright. He has minority stakes in +600 beyond that as well. And this, investors believe, may “complicate” the notion of getting Intel back up and running. Andrew King with Bastille Ventures noted “The simple fact is that Mr. Tan is unqualified to serve as the head of any company competing against China, let alone one with actual intelligence and national security ramifications like Intel and its tremendous legacy connections to all areas of America’s intelligence and the defense ecosystem.”