Arc Pro B50 Benchmarks Surface as Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) Stock Tumbles Further
Intel's bleeding continues—Arc Pro B50 performance numbers hit the web just as shares slide another notch downward.
Benchmark Blues
Early tests show the Pro B50 pushing pixels but failing to push investor confidence. Numbers don't lie—neither do stock charts.
Market Reaction
Traders dump INTC while scrambling for the next shiny object. Another day, another disappointment for the chip giant trying to play catch-up.
Wall Street's favorite pastime? Watching legacy tech fumble while crypto eats the world—but hey, at least their dividends are safe. For now.
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The Arc Pro B50 got a set of Linux performance benchmarks, and open-source driver support metrics as well. As it turns out, the news was not especially bad; Phoronix testing indicated that the Arc Pro B50 came in as a fairly close match for an Nvidia (NVDA) RTX A2000. The Arc Pro had a 59 Watt average power consumption and a 71 Watt peak. The RTX A2000, meanwhile, had a 54 Watt average and a 70.5 Watt peak. Further, testing found that the Arc Pro B50 could handle solid workloads and offer a decent value besides.
All told, the Arc Pro B50 served as a good “…low-profile, entry-level workstation graphics card backed by fully open-source Linux graphics driver support.” And with a price tag of $349, there may be a market waiting for it when it rolls out.
“Better to Take the Government’s Money”
That was when popular, controversial, and perhaps even notorious stock analyst Jim Cramer came out with some new remarks about Intel. And Cramer was surprisingly generous….with taxpayer money. Cramer noted “…they needed to do a fundraiser. And it’s sometimes better to take the government’s money because that therefore helps you try to raise other…remember that’s only a drop in the bucket of what Intel needs.”
This makes a certain amount of sense, and investors have responded accordingly, with a 26% jump in August alone.
Is Intel a Buy, Hold or Sell?
Turning to Wall Street, analysts have a Hold consensus rating on INTC stock based on one Buy, 25 Holds and three Sells assigned in the past three months, as indicated by the graphic below. After a 24.6% rally in its share price over the past year, the average INTC price target of $22.34 per share implies 7.2% downside risk.

Disclosure