I would pay careful attention to the language in this story, which does not say there is a signed agreement in place to produce, but rather the two sides are in discussions and Apple is still concerned about Intel's technology. Will it happen? Probably. But it's still early.
Apple Leaks Digest — May 11, 2026: Intel deal confirmed, iOS 26.5 incoming, Gurman on macOS 27
The Apple-Intel preliminary chip manufacturing agreement — first reported by WSJ on May 8 — reached eight-source confirmation by Monday morning, with Intel stock hitting an all-time high of ~$125 (+240% YTD). Mark Gurman's Sunday Power On newsletter revealed two macOS 27 features: a Liquid Glass design refinement and Safari AI automatic tab grouping, both confirmed for WWDC 2026 (June 8). iOS 26.5, carrying RCS end-to-end encryption (carrier-limited), Maps ad infrastructure, and the Pride wallpaper, was not yet released as of 08:00 UTC with a ~17:00 UTC release expected. Vision Pro dissolution rumors were rebutted by Gurman and AppleInsider. A full corroboration map and leaker status table close the digest.
Monday, May 11. The weekend's tentative Apple-Intel story has hardened overnight into an eight-source confirmation wall. Gurman's Power On from Sunday covered macOS 27 design fixes and a Safari AI feature. iOS 26.5 is expected to drop in hours. And Vision Pro's obituary, it turns out, was premature.
Apple-Intel deal: the confirmation wave arrives
The story has moved. What the Wall Street Journal broke on May 8 as a "preliminary agreement" — and what Mark Gurman immediately walked back as "discussions, not a signed deal" — has now been independently confirmed by TrendForce, The Elec (both English and Korean), Taipei Times, DigiTimes, and GF Securities analyst Jeff Pu.123
Intel's stock closed Friday up roughly 13.9% on the WSJ report, then pushed further overnight to approximately $125 per share — an all-time high and a 240% year-to-date gain.2 That move is not driven by retail enthusiasm; it reflects institutional traders pricing in the probability that Apple becomes Intel Foundry's anchor customer for non-TSMC chip production.
The framing dispute between the WSJ and Gurman is worth unpacking, because it still hasn't been fully resolved. The WSJ said "preliminary agreement." Gurman said no signed deal exists and Apple retains concerns about Intel's technology readiness. Both accounts can simultaneously be true: a preliminary agreement in M&A or manufacturing contexts often means a binding term sheet or letter of intent is in place, not a full production contract. Gurman's correction targets the implication that execution was locked in — not the underlying reality that serious commitments have been made.
콘텐츠 카드를 불러오는 중…
The geopolitical dimension of this deal is not a side note. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick met with Tim Cook and actively encouraged the partnership.2 The U.S. federal government holds approximately 10% of Intel — roughly $9 billion in subsidies from the CHIPS and Science Act — making the government both a financial stakeholder and a political advocate for a deal that would keep advanced chip manufacturing on domestic soil. President Trump also urged Cook directly to work with Intel.
Apple is not limiting its foundry diversification to Intel. A separate set of talks with Samsung Electronics is also underway — a meeting was held on May 5 — and Samsung's Taylor, Texas fab, a $17 billion facility using 2nm gate-all-around process technology, is expected to reach mass production readiness in 2027.1
The "why now" question has a clear answer, and Tim Cook supplied it directly on Apple's April 30 earnings call: "There were supply constraints due to limited availability of leading-edge process technologies used for system-on-chip production."4 That's not a strategic aspiration — it's a production bottleneck. TSMC's advanced capacity is over-subscribed, primarily because AI chip customers like NVIDIA are consuming leading-edge process slots at unprecedented rates.
Park Li of President Capital Management made this mechanism explicit: the Apple-Intel move "was not due to problems with TSMC's technology, but because strong demand for advanced processes from AI chip customers has tightened TSMC's production capacity."3 That framing matters. Intel isn't winning this business because it outperformed TSMC; it's getting a seat at the table because TSMC's best table is overbooked.
Arisa Liu of the Taiwan Institute of Economic Research adds the important caveat: "TSMC's advanced packaging technologies, including integrated fan-out and chip-on-wafer-on-substrate, remain critical to the performance of Apple's A-series and M-series chips."3 Intel's 18A-P process is being evaluated for M-series chips, with first Intel-manufactured low-end M-series chips potentially appearing as early as mid-2027 per Commercial Times. But packaging is where Intel and Samsung still trail — and for the most performance-sensitive Apple chips, that gap means TSMC stays primary.
Jeff Pu of GF Securities projects Intel could use its 14A process for non-Pro iPhone chips by 2028.1 That timeline — 2028, non-Pro, 14A — is a useful sanity check on the scope of what's being discussed. This is not Apple replacing TSMC for flagship chips. This is Apple securing a secondary manufacturing lane for volume chips while TSMC handles performance-critical SoCs.
Next watchpoint: Intel's stockholders meeting is Tuesday, May 13. CEO Lip-Bu Tan may address the Apple discussions publicly for the first time. Separately, Tan and NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang were photographed together at a Carnegie Mellon ceremony on Sunday, with Tan hinting at "new and exciting products" in collaboration with NVIDIA.5 Whether that's related to the Apple talks or a separate foundry thread, it signals Intel is actively marketing its 18A generation to anchor customers simultaneously.
Credibility: Confirmed. Eight independent sources as of May 11. Gurman's framing dispute narrows the claim to "active discussions with preliminary commitments, not a signed production contract." Confidence level for eventual deal: high.
C2 modem and memory crunch: the supply chain underneath iPhone 18
Apple's in-house C2 5G modem will be manufactured on TSMC's 2nm process, according to Taiwan's Economic Daily News as cited by TrendForce.1 The C2 adds mmWave support — the short-range, high-bandwidth 5G band absent from the C1 that debuted in the iPhone 16e — and satellite connectivity. iPhone 17 will be the last iPhone lineup to ship with Qualcomm modems; every iPhone 18 model transitions to the C2.
The modem story and the Intel foundry story are connected. TSMC has already secured the modem orders for the C2, which is partly why Apple needs Intel and Samsung as relief valves — TSMC's advanced capacity is stretched across multiple Apple chip families and AI inference chips simultaneously.
The memory side of the supply picture is, if anything, worse. DRAM contract prices rose 90-95% quarter-over-quarter in Q1 2026.1 NAND Flash has risen 246% since the start of 2025, with 70% of that move in the last 60 days. A DigiTimes headline this morning, while paywalled, states bluntly: "The AI memory squeeze may not ease before 2028."6
These numbers are not abstract to Apple. Tim Cook named memory pricing as a "primary constraint" on Apple's forward margins in the May 5 earnings call. For iPhone 18, which will pack more DRAM for on-device AI inference than any prior iPhone, the memory cost per unit will be materially higher than iPhone 17. That pressure either compresses Apple's margins or gets passed to retail pricing — or, more likely, both in partial degrees.
Credibility: Likely (C2 modem on TSMC 2nm — single-source Economic Daily News via TrendForce, not yet independently corroborated). Memory pricing data is confirmed across multiple sources.
Gurman's Power On (May 10): macOS 27 design fixes and Safari AI tabs
Mark Gurman's Sunday Power On newsletter contained two distinct macOS 27/iOS 27 leaks, both confirmed for WWDC 2026 (June 8 keynote, dev beta immediately following).78
macOS 27 design refinement. Apple is preparing a "slight redesign" targeting the transparency and shadow quirks in Liquid Glass that have hurt readability in macOS Tahoe. Gurman is specific about the scope: "Liquid Glass itself isn't going anywhere… It's simply being refined. The goal is more of a cleanup and refinement effort aligned with the company's wider push to polish its software this year."8 The readability complaints around Liquid Glass have been consistent since macOS Tahoe's developer betas last year — buttons and toolbars in certain lighting modes were genuinely hard to parse. Gurman's framing suggests Apple acknowledged internally that the first Liquid Glass implementation over-indexed on visual novelty at the expense of legibility.
AppleInsider notes this follows a familiar Apple pattern — the iOS 7 redesign was similarly rough in year one before being refined into the cleaner iOS 8-era aesthetic.9 That historical parallel is apt, though it shouldn't be oversold: the iOS 7 transition was a full paradigm shift; Liquid Glass is more constrained, and the fix here is reportedly surgical rather than structural.
Safari AI tab grouping. In current test builds of iOS 27, a new "Organize Tabs" option appears in the center-top tab group button.8 Gurman: "I'm told that in test versions of iOS 27, the center-top button that users can tap to move between their tab groups has a new option called 'Organize Tabs.' You can choose whether you want the grouping to occur automatically or not." The automatic option implies on-device ML inference analyzing tab titles and URLs to cluster by topic — the kind of task Apple Intelligence is well-suited for. This will ship across iOS 27, iPadOS 27, and macOS 27.
Credibility: Confirmed. Gurman is the primary source; both claims come from his Power On newsletter, with secondary coverage from MacRumors and AppleInsider. Track record on WWDC software previews: Gurman's pre-WWDC feature leaks are accurate at high rates, particularly when sourced from internal build inspection rather than supply chain inference.
iOS 26.5: what's in it, and why the RCS caveat matters
As of 08:00 UTC, iOS 26.5 has not been released to the public.10 The current build — RC 2 (23F77), seeded to developers on May 8 — is typically the final candidate before public release. Expected release window: approximately 10 AM Pacific (17:00 UTC) today, Monday May 11.
Three confirmed features, per Apple's own release notes:
- RCS end-to-end encryption: Encrypted messaging between iPhone and Android over the RCS standard. This closes the gap the FBI flagged in late 2024, when it warned Americans to stop texting between iPhone and Android precisely because cross-platform SMS/MMS offered no encryption. The catch, as Forbes' Zak Doffman documented, is that the feature is "Not Available For All" — rollout is limited by carrier support and device generation.11 That caveat is significant: the headline security benefit depends on both parties being on supported carriers and hardware, which in practice will exclude many Android users outside major markets for the foreseeable future.
- Suggested Places in Apple Maps: Location recommendations powered by trends and recent searches. The ad infrastructure is included in this build but not yet active to users in the US and Canada — it will activate "later this year," meaning paying merchants will eventually appear in map suggestions.10 This is Apple Maps' most direct move yet into the advertising model that has powered Google Maps for a decade.
- Pride Luminance wallpaper: Dynamically refracting spectrum of colors, released alongside the 2026 Pride Edition Sport Loop band and watch face. A cosmetic addition — included here for completeness.
One additional item Apple announced on its developer page: new App Store subscription terms (monthly subscriptions with 12-month commitment) become available with iOS 26.5's release.12 Low-profile from a user perspective, but meaningful for subscription-based app developers.
What iOS 26.5 does not include: the larger Siri overhaul and on-device AI inference expansions Apple is reportedly preparing for iOS 27. This release is a mid-cycle maintenance update, not a preview of what's coming at WWDC.
Supported devices: iPhone 11 series through iPhone 17 series; iPhone SE (2nd generation and later).
Vision Pro is not dead — the dissolution story was wrong
Rumors circulated on April 29 that Apple had dissolved the Vision Products Group and effectively abandoned spatial computing. Those rumors were sourced to an anonymous team member, according to AppleInsider's Wesley Hilliard — specifically, "a team member that was moved and upset about the change."13
Gurman addressed this directly in his Sunday Power On.7 The Vision Products Group was reorganized and broken into various teams, but development has not stopped. The clearer picture of what's happening: Apple is shifting Vision Pro's organizational muscle toward the rumored smart glasses product while maintaining visionOS as a platform. Gurman's read on the job listings:
"And for folks trying to use Vision Pro and visionOS job listings as evidence the Vision Pro is thriving: the hardware jobs are mostly for glasses and the software jobs are because visionOS isn't going away (maintenance + glasses), as I've maintained for a while."14
John Gruber of Daring Fireball partially contradicts this — he suggests the Vision Products Group still exists in some form — but doesn't dispute that resources are being reallocated toward glasses hardware. That residual disagreement is not especially material: the functional conclusion, from multiple angles, is that visionOS 27 is confirmed for WWDC 2026 (June 8) and Apple has not abandoned the spatial platform.
What is shifting is Apple's internal investment posture. The M5 refresh in October 2025 extended the Vision Pro's hardware life, but ~600,000 units sold in year one is a niche market by Apple's standards. The glasses project is where Apple believes volume eventually lives. That context — not dissolution, but rebalancing — is the honest read of the situation.
Credibility: Confirmed (visionOS 27 at WWDC 2026, VPG reorganized but not dissolved). Dissolution claims from unnamed upset employee — low credibility. Gurman + AppleInsider + Gruber in rough alignment.
Corroboration map and leaker watch
Claim status as of May 11, 08:00 UTC
| Claim | Sources | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Apple-Intel preliminary chip manufacturing agreement | WSJ + TrendForce + The Elec (EN/KR) + Taipei Times + DigiTimes + GF Securities | Confirmed |
| Apple-Samsung foundry talks (Taylor TX fab) | TrendForce + The Elec | Confirmed |
| Apple C2 modem on TSMC 2nm, mmWave + satellite | Economic Daily News via TrendForce | Likely (single-source) |
| macOS 27 Liquid Glass redesign + Safari AI tabs | Gurman (Bloomberg) | Confirmed |
| iOS 26.5 pending, RC 2 (build 23F77) | Multiple (MoneyControl, Apple Developer) | Confirmed |
| Vision Products Group reorganized, not dissolved | Gurman (Bloomberg) + AppleInsider | Confirmed |
| iPhone 18 Pro aluminum frame (no material change) | Fixed Focus Digital (Weibo, May 5) | Single-source — unverified |
| iPhone Ultra modular design | Instant Digital (Weibo, May 6) | Single-source — unverified |
| iPhone 18 standard model downgrade/delay | Fixed Focus Digital (Weibo, May 5) | Single-source — unverified |
| AI pendant wearable | Gurman (Bloomberg, older) | Single-source — unverified |
| AirPods with cameras — DVT phase | Gurman (Bloomberg) | Single-source — unverified |
| 18.8-inch foldable device | Jeff Pu (GF Securities, since April) | Single-source — unverified |
| Smart glasses gesture control | Various aggregators | Single-source — unverified |
| LTPO+ panel approval for iPhone 18 Pro | The Elec (May 6) | Single-source; SamMobile "corroboration" traces back to same Elec report |
| FCC OET / Bluetooth SIG Apple filings | Direct monitoring | Zero findings — 14 consecutive runs |
Active leaker status
- Mark Gurman — Active. Power On published May 10 (macOS 27 + visionOS). The Intel clarification post on May 8 was his last supply chain intervention. His next major piece will likely be a pre-WWDC iOS 27 feature overview.
- Ming-Chi Kuo — Silent for 61 consecutive days (last Apple post: March 11). His November 2025 Intel chip prediction was substantially vindicated by the WSJ report — a data point on his supply chain sourcing depth. Kuo's WWDC preview note, if he publishes one, typically appears mid-to-late May.
- Jeff Pu (GF Securities) — Content accessible only via aggregators (MacRumors, 9to5Mac); his direct Facebook channel requires login. His May 5 research note on Intel was substantively confirmed.
- Ross Young (DSCC) — No new Apple panel reports in the window. The LTPO+ approval story remains waiting for his independent confirmation or denial.
- Majin Bu — X account appears private. No publicly accessible posts.
- UniverseIce, Fixed Focus Digital, Instant Digital, Digital Chat Station, Nicolás Alvarez — No Apple content in the window.
- FCC OET / Bluetooth SIG — Zero Apple filings for 14 consecutive monitoring runs. This is a structurally reliable absence: the pattern is definitive, not a monitoring gap.
What to watch
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| Today, ~17:00 UTC | iOS 26.5 public release |
| May 13 (Tuesday) | Intel stockholders meeting — Lip-Bu Tan may address Apple deal publicly |
| Mid-to-late May | Ming-Chi Kuo WWDC preview note possible (61-day silence pattern) |
| June 8–12 | WWDC 2026 — macOS 27, iOS 27, visionOS 27 reveals |
| September 2026 | iPhone 18 Pro / Max / Fold expected launch window |
Cover photo: Jakub Pabis via Pexels
참고 출처
- 1Apple Reportedly Keeps 2nm 5G Modem Orders with TSMC Amid Intel Cooperation Signals
- 2Apple Said to Explore Intel Foundry Partnership Alongside Samsung Talks
- 3TSMC to remain top Apple chipmaker despite reported Intel deal: Experts
- 4애플의 TSMC 의존도 낮추기...삼성에 이어 인텔과도 협력설
- 5Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan Hints at Exciting New Products With NVIDIA
- 6The AI memory squeeze may not ease before 2028
- 7Apple to Make Design Changes in macOS 27 to Address Tahoe Quirks
- 8macOS 27: Two More Changes Leaked Ahead of WWDC Next Month
- 9Liquid Glass won't get killed in macOS 27, expect a tune-up instead
- 10iOS 26.5 to roll out soon: Supported iPhones, and new features it will bring
- 11'Not Available For All'—Apple Changes iPhone Messaging Next Week
- 12Apple Developer News — May 2026
- 13Not dead yet: Apple Vision still has a future
- 14Mark Gurman (@markgurman) on X — Vision Pro jobs
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