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1996 Intel Annual Report
strategy for growth

The results: The bottom line for customers and stockholders

PC cost per million instructions per second (MIPS). 1991 - $225, 1996 - $7 Customers get more for less

Returning value to stockholders is rooted in our ability to deliver results to our customers. We have consistently generated manufacturing advances to squeeze increasing numbers of transistors onto each processor - leading to more power on desktops for less and less money. This trend spurs creativity among hardware and software companies, continuing to drive growth in the industry as a whole.

What Intel did for shareholders

Intel ranked #1 in calendar year 1996 total return to investors among the top 100 U.S. companies by market capitalization. In addition, in Fortune magazine's annual Corporate Reputations Survey, Intel was named the seventh most admired company in the U.S. (see table at right).

Intel named the seventh most admired company in the U.S.
Note: Past performance does not guarantee future results. Share and per share amounts reported herein have been adjusted for stock splits through 1996 only.

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Content published April 8, 1997.