Smarter Analyst

Barclays Keeps a Sell Rating on Intel (INTC)

Barclays analyst Blayne Curtis maintained a Sell rating on Intel (INTC) on January 13 and set a price target of $50.00. The company’s shares closed last Thursday at $59.25.

According to TipRanks.com, Curtis is a 5-star analyst with an average return of 26.3% and a 68.5% success rate. Curtis covers the Technology sector, focusing on stocks such as MACOM Technology Solutions Holdings, Advanced Micro Devices, and Allegro MicroSystems.

The word on The Street in general, suggests a Hold analyst consensus rating for Intel with a $56.79 average price target, representing a -2.8% downside. In a report issued on December 29, RBC Capital also maintained a Sell rating on the stock with a $40.00 price target.

See today’s analyst top recommended stocks >>

The company has a one-year high of $69.29 and a one-year low of $43.61. Currently, Intel has an average volume of 38.74M.

TipRanks has tracked 36,000 company insiders and found that a few of them are better than others when it comes to timing their transactions. See which 3 stocks are most likely to make moves following their insider activities.

Intel Corp. engages in the design, manufacture, and sale of computer products and technologies. It delivers computer, networking, data storage, and communications platforms. The firm operates through the following segments: Client Computing Group (CCG), Data Center Group (DCG), Internet of Things Group (IOTG), Non-Volatile Memory Solutions Group (NSG), Programmable Solutions (PSG), and All Other. The CCG segment consists of platforms designed for notebooks, 2-in-1 systems, desktops, tablets, phones, wireless and wired connectivity products, and mobile communication components. The DCG segment includes workload-optimized platforms and related products designed for enterprise, cloud, and communication infrastructure market. The IOTG segment offers compute solutions for targeted verticals and embedded applications for the retail, manufacturing, health care, energy, automotive, and government market segments. The NSG segment constitutes of NAND flash memory products primarily used in solid-state drives. The PSG segment contains programmable semiconductors and related products for a broad range of markets, including communications, data center, industrial, military, and automotive. The All Other segment consists of results from other non-reportable segment and corporate-related charges. The company was founded by Robert Norton Noyce and Gordon Earle Moore on July 18, 1968 and is headquartered in Santa Clara, CA.

Read More on INTC: