Intel’s first-quarter 2026 earnings report landed with a force few on Wall Street anticipated. Revenue came in at $13.58 billion against expectations of $12.42 billion. Adjusted earnings per share reached $0.29, versus a consensus estimate of just $0.01. The stock briefly hit an all-time high in after-hours trading, surpassing its dot-com era peak. For a company that had spent the better part of two years in restructuring mode, it was a remarkable reversal.
Intel’s results, read alongside broader market conditions, point to four storylines we expect to affect the end-of-life industry: equipment disposition, domestic manufacturing, AI-driven server demand, and the ongoing Windows 10 retirement wave, each carrying direct implications for material flows in the months and years ahead.
AI is the engine, not the consumer PC
The growth in Intel’s Q1 results came from one place. The Data Center and AI division drove revenue of $5.1 billion, up 22% year-over-year, powered by demand from hyperscale customers deploying AI workloads. CEO Lip-Bu Tan said plainly that the CPU is “reinserting itself as the indispensable foundation of the AI era,” with Google publicly committing to Intel processors for AI inference.
Consumer PCs, particularly at the retail level, remain largely absent from the growth picture. Industry trackers IDC and Gartner both reported modest Q1 PC shipment growth, but both flagged it as driven largely by inventory front-loading ahead of expected component price hikes, not organic end-user demand. Real consumer pull remains soft, particularly in the Americas.
For recyclers forecasting inbound volume, the difference matters. An AI server surge produces a very different downstream recycling profile than a consumer PC wave, with different timescales, device types, and material compositions. The data center refresh cycle typically runs three to five years, meaning the AI hardware being deployed today will begin creating substantial decommissioning volume in the latter half of this decade. Industry stakeholders with data center capabilities should be watching this build-out closely.
$800 million in equipment with ‘no identified re-use’
Perhaps the most underreported detail in Intel’s recent financial filings, and the one most relevant to the e-scrap sector, is a line item from its 2025 restructuring: approximately $800 million in non-cash impairment and accelerated depreciation charges related to excess manufacturing tools described as having “no identified re-use.”
Intel’s own filings use the phrase “no identified re-use,” meaning the company could find no buyer, internal application, or alternative deployment for roughly $800 million worth of advanced manufacturing tools. In practical terms, Intel had sophisticated, expensive fab equipment sitting idle with nowhere to go. Semiconductor fab equipment comprised of lithography systems, etch tools, deposition chambers, metrology platforms and other equipment, carries replacement costs that routinely run into the tens of millions per unit.
At tens of millions of dollars per unit, $800 million in written-off fab equipment accounts for a substantial number of machines that, by Intel’s own accounting, had exhausted every conventional option. The secondary equipment market and downstream processors have a legitimate interest in understanding how that disposition was ultimately handled.
The company also cancelled two planned new fab facilities and delayed a third during its 2025 restructuring, while reducing its core workforce by approximately 15%. Cancelled fab projects generate significant decommissioning activity, from cleanroom equipment, gas delivery systems, and chemical handling infrastructure, to precision tools, much of which has secondary market value or requires specialized end-of-life handling.
Intel has not publicly detailed the disposition of those assets. Whether they flowed to equipment brokers, were refurbished and redeployed internationally, or entered recycling streams is unknown.
A new domestic fab and what it generates
Intel’s Q1 results also reflect the ramp-up of its new Arizona fabrication facility, producing chips on its advanced 18A process node. For recyclers, it’s worth noting that modern semiconductor manufacturing generates a continuous stream of process-related byproducts — some recoverable, some hazardous, all requiring specialized handling.
Intel’s domestic fab expansion is part of a broader U.S. semiconductor manufacturing push — one the CHIPS Act was specifically designed to accelerate. The upstream material flows associated with that manufacturing will grow accordingly. Recyclers and processors with semiconductor manufacturing relationships should view this as a durable opportunity.
The Windows 10 pipeline: Quieter, but real
Separate from the Intel narrative, the single most tangible near-term driver of e-scrap volume remains the retirement wave tied to Windows 10’s end-of-support, which Microsoft ended in October 2025. Devices that cannot meet Windows 11’s hardware requirements, particularly the TPM 2.0 requirement that excludes a large share of machines manufactured before 2017, are being retired rather than upgraded.
IDC cited Windows 10 migration as one of the genuine demand drivers behind Q1 PC shipment growth, as enterprises and consumers bought new machines to replace retiring ones. That pipeline is active now and will continue generating volume through the remainder of 2026 as stragglers complete their transitions.
Reading the signals correctly
Intel’s Q1 2026 earnings are an interesting and genuine recovery story, confirming that the near-term volume for the industry is expected to come from the quieter, steadier flows, not from the AI boom the financial headlines are focused on. Specific to Intel, this flow will come from AI driving chip demand in ways that will eventually generate a major server decommissioning cycle.
Domestic fab expansion means growing upstream material streams. Equipment written off at hundreds of millions of dollars left an unaccounted disposition trail. And the Windows 10 retirement wave continues to push functionally sound but OS-obsolete devices into the market regardless of what Intel’s stock is doing.
























