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Investors worry Trump’s Intel deal kicks off era of US industrial policy

By Ross Kerber

(Reuters) -The U.S. government’s new stake in Intel (INTC) is making some investors nervous that President Donald Trump’s deal heralds an era of government meddling in private industry, particularly as the arrangement followed Trump’s call for the resignation of the computer chip maker’s CEO.

The deal, announced on Friday, converts $11.1 billion in Chips Act grants and other government funding into a 9.9% equity stake in Intel. The company’s press release announcing the deal included statements from the CEOs of Microsoft (MSFT), Dell (DELL) and other companies praising the move.

Investors said this level of tractability was not usually associated with relations between businesses and Washington.

Trump had said on social media that Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan wanted to keep his job and “ended up giving us $10 billion for the United States.”

“It sets a bad precedent if the president can just take 10% of a company by threatening the CEO,” said James McRitchie, a private investor and shareholder activist in California who owns Intel shares. The statement, he said, effectively sends the message that “we love Trump, we don’t want 10% of our company taken away.”

Intel shares closed at $20.41 on August 6, the day before Trump called for Tan’s resignation, and trended upward to finish at $24.56 on August 15, the last trading day before Trump’s terms surfaced. On Tuesday, Intel closed down 1% at $24.35. The deal does not give the U.S. Commerce Department board seats, according to a securities filing, and it requires Commerce to support the board on director nominees and proposals. But Commerce can vote “as it wishes” on several other matters.

Fitch Ratings said the deal does not improve Intel’s BBB credit rating, which sits just above junk status. While it provides more liquidity, it does not fundamentally improve customer demand for Intel chips, Fitch said in a research note Tuesday.

Intel’s filing also states the deal dilutes existing shareholders, reduces their voting rights, and could subject the company to additional regulations or restrictions in other countries. What’s more, CEO Tan said Intel did not need the money. SoftBank poured $2 billion into the chipmaker three days before the Trump announcement.

This was the latest extraordinary intervention in a private corporation by Trump’s White House, following a military deal for a mining company stake announced in July and influence over U.S. Steel as part of its purchase by Japan’s Nippon Steel (NPSCY). On Tuesday U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said the Trump administration may take stakes in defense contractors.

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