Intel Corp. surprised investors with higher-than-anticipated second-quarter earnings, aided by strength in PC-related sales as Chief Executive Pat Gelsinger moves swiftly to orchestrate the chip-giant’s turnaround amid a global semiconductor shortage.

Intel said second-quarter sales and profit were broadly flat from a year earlier at $19.6 billion and $5.1 billion, respectively. Wall Street on average expected sales of $17.8 billion and a $4.2 billion profit, according to analysts surveyed by FactSet.

“The digitization of everything continues to accelerate, creating a vast growth opportunity for us and our customers across core and emerging business areas,” Mr. Gelsinger said in a statement Thursday.

Since he rejoined Intel in February, Mr. Gelsinger has committed to establishing a contract chip-making operation, announced major factory expansions and lured back talent to restore the Silicon Valley icon’s technology prowess. The company also is in talks to potentially buy GlobalFoundries for around $30 billion, The Wall Street Journal has reported, in what would be its biggest ever acquisition and a signal of how serious Mr. Gelsinger is in making Intel a merchant chip producer.

The moves come as demand for chips has been surging, leading to a global shortage and rising prices for some consumer gadgets.

This post first appeared on wsj.com

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