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Video introduction by Kevin Sellers, Vice President, Director, Investor Relations:
Welcome to the 2011 Intel Shareholder Forum. My name is Kevin Sellers. Im Vice President of
Investor Relations for Intel Corporation. I come to you today from the Intel facilities where . . .
we make these. This is a silicon wafer with lots of microprocessors on it. And Im proud to say
that Intel builds the most advanced microprocessors in the world. And Ill talk a little bit more
about our business in just a minute.
This is our third consecutive year using a hybrid approach to our annual shareholder meeting. In
addition to our face-to-face live shareholder meeting, were also using a virtual online capability
that we hope is just as good as if you were attending in person, an environment where you can
listen, vote, and submit questions just like you could if attending live.
This year, our annual shareholder meeting is being held on Thursday, May 19th at 8:30 a.m. here in
our headquarters in Santa Clara, California. At the meeting, our CEO, Paul Otellini, will present
an update on our business strategy and directions, will conduct the normal business, tally the
votes on the required items, and, of course, answer questions. In our question and answer session,
well be taking questions from the room as well as those submitted through this forum. We hope to
see many of you there.
Lets take a minute and look back at 2010. 2010 was Intels best year ever. Revenue was up 24
percent to an all-time high of $43.6 billion. This is the first time Intel ever crossed the $40
billion revenue number. Net income was $11.5 billion, and
earnings per share was $2.01 per share.
PCs had a good year in 2010. They grew about 17 percent worldwide. But a particular bright spot I
want to highlight for just a moment, and that is our datacenter group. This business was up 35
percent on the year during 2010, and exited the year representing about 22 percent of Intels
revenue but over one-third of Intels profits.
Page 2
Looking ahead, our strategy is fairly straightforward. If there is a device that computes and
connects to the Internet, we want Intel to have the best engine for that device. So this is more
than just personal computers and servers. Whats happening is that TVs are becoming smart. Theyre
connecting and computing.
Phones are now called smart phones for a reason, because theyre increasingly compute-intensive.
Cars, embedded devices, retail signs, point-of-sale terminals all matter of devices in our lives
are now computing and connecting to the Internet in ways we didnt imagine even 10 years ago.
So to service this growing demand for compute devices, Intel has three pillars to us to our
strategy. The first is what I mentioned, is to build the most energy-efficient engine on the planet
for any device that computes. The second is we want to insure that those devices, those engines,
can connect to the Internet in any way our customers choose to do so.
And third, increasingly important is the notion of security. And we want Intel to build engines
that are the most secure engines on the planet. So look forward for more announcements in each of
these product categories as the year unfolds.
I know an item thats near and dear to every shareholder of Intel, and that is: What are we doing
to return cash to you, the shareholder? Well, during 2010, Intel paid $3.5 billion in dividends,
which represents a compound annual growth rate of 34 percent since 2003. The dividend is very
important to Intel.
But in addition to the dividend, weve also reinitiated a buy-back, which we began we restarted
again in Q4 of last year, and in January of this year we increased our buy-back authorization by an
additional $10 billion.
Page 3
One last thing before I close. Being a good corporate citizen is just good business. Here are a few
simple highlights of our social responsibility efforts in 2010.
At Intel, we believe that our longstanding commitment to corporate responsibility creates value for
both society and for Intel. The first of these is our people. Intel will continue to invest in our
people. In 2010, we invested over $250 million in our employee education and training programs and
provided a range of work-life benefits and programs from employee sabbaticals to our Intel Involved
volunteer program through which close to 50 percent of all employees participated in last year.
The second is our planet. We invest in driving the energy-efficient performance of our products and
continue to be a leader in environmental responsibility. For example, in 2010, Intel continued to be
the largest voluntary purchaser of green power in the U.S., according to the EPA. And we worked
with a third party to complete nine onsite solar installations in the U.S. and in Israel.
And third, inspiring the next generation. We will continue our strong commitment to empowering and
inspiring students to improve the quality and access to education worldwide. Intel has invested
over $1 billion to improve education over the past decade and has helped train over nine million
teachers through the Intel Teach program. Our investments in education help governments around the
world advance economic development and inspire future innovation, innovation which is essential to
our future success as a company.
With that, we thank you for your ownership of Intel, we welcome you to our Shareholder Forum, and
we look forward to communicating to you throughout 2011.