A report alleging Intel chips have a security flaw could cost the chipmaker a lot of money, according to one Wall Street firm.
The British tech website Register reported Tuesday that some Intel processors have a “fundamental design flaw” that will spur a significant security update of Linux and Microsoft Windows operating systems to work around it. It said AMD chips were not affected.
Bernstein reiterated its underperform rating for Intel shares, saying the issue will have negative implications for its financials.
“For Intel, we believe the negative (charges, potential ongoing liability, possible share loss etc) outweighs the potentially positive (if you want to call it that) of a possible accelerated replacement cycle,” analyst Stacy Rasgon wrote in a note to clients Wednesday.
Rasgon noted the $475 million charge for the Pentium FDIV bug in 1994 and the $700 million charge for the Cougar Point chipset problem in 2011.
“The current problem feels much bigger” than the previous two incidents, he wrote. Intel’s “potential liability remains the biggest open-ended question we have at the moment.”
The analyst reaffirmed his $34 price target for Intel shares, representing 27 percent downside to Tuesday’s close.
Shares of AMD were up 8.8 percent Wednesday, while Intel’s stock declined 4.4 percent.
AMD declined to comment on The Register report. Intel did not respond to a request for comment.
Intel shares rose 27 percent in 2017 versus AMD’s stock 9 percent decline.
— CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed to this story.
Intel's alleged security flaw could cost chipmaker a lot of money, Bernstein says