Intel’s SambaNova Investment Clears U.S. Antitrust Review
Intel has secured U.S. antitrust clearance for its expanded investment in AI chip startup SambaNova, removing a potential regulatory hurdle as the semiconductor giant deepens its position in one of the industry’s fast-growing artificial intelligence infrastructure segments.
Intel invested $35 million in SambaNova earlier this year, increasing its ownership stake to 8.2% from 6.8%, and plans an additional $15 million investment. The approval signals that U.S. regulators do not currently view the deal as posing significant competitive concerns, despite Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan also serving as chairman of SambaNova.
The move is strategically significant as Intel seeks broader exposure to AI hardware markets beyond its traditional CPU dominance. SambaNova specializes in AI accelerators and enterprise-scale machine learning systems, placing it in direct competition with other advanced AI chipmakers operating in a rapidly expanding market shaped by surging demand for generative AI, inference, and large-scale data center compute.
For Intel, the deal may serve multiple purposes: financial upside through startup growth, strategic influence in AI infrastructure, and diversification as the company works to strengthen its broader semiconductor relevance amid fierce competition from Nvidia, AMD, and emerging AI-focused firms.
Regulatory approval also highlights how government scrutiny is increasingly focused not only on large acquisitions, but also on minority strategic investments that could affect competitive dynamics in critical technology sectors. While the current transaction passed review, Intel’s growing involvement with SambaNova may continue attracting attention as AI chip competition intensifies.
The broader implication is clear: major semiconductor players are increasingly using targeted startup investments to secure positioning in the next phase of AI compute expansion, where ownership, partnerships, and ecosystem control may prove as important as chip performance itself.


