
The company expects to generate $13.2 billion in the second quarter leading to a gross margin of 62 percent and a tax rate of around 20 percent. Those figures are improvements on the company’s most recent quarter, when it had a gross margin of 60.5 percent and a tax rate of a far steeper 25.5 percent.
Given those upward corrections, Intel could be working toward stronger per-share profit in the period. The street expects Intel to generate $0.48 in profit per share on $13.51 billion in revenue in the quarter.
Intel has long been a functional bellwether for the PC market.
Intel’s Data Center Group saw its top line expand 19 percent compared to the year-ago quarter, while the company’s Internet of Things Group picked up 11 percent more revenue than last year’s first quarter. Intel remains a company in transition away from the primal past of the PC’s fading hegemony. And it’s doing so while boosting implied gross profit. Investors seem at least mildly enthused.