Trending tickers: Intel, Rightmove, HSBC, Commerzbank and Wizz Air

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Intel (INTC)

Chipmaker Intel closed Friday's session more than 3% higher, following reports that rival Qualcomm (QCOM) had approached the company about a possible takeover.

“This would be the biggest deal in the history of the semiconductor industry, ever,” Futurum Group chief market strategist Cory Johnson told Yahoo Finance.

He said that while Intel was once the largest semiconductor company in the world, that was no longer the case and that the company was "still very much wedded to selling chips into PCs because their business is selling chips into the data center has just not worked out."

"They've missed so many product cycles with Nvidia (NVDA) cleaning their clocks in the data center, and that shows no sign of any immediate change," Johnson added.

In addition, Bloomberg reported on Sunday that Apollo Global Management — the parent company of Yahoo — has offered to invest as much as $5bn (£3.8bn) in Intel.

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Intel has faced challenges this year, having announced in August that it planned to layoff 15,000 employees. The chipmaker also missed second-quarter estimates on sales, gross profit margins and earnings, citing challenging market conditions and higher-than-expected costs to increase production of its AI chips.

However, shares ticked higher last week, after Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger announced in a memo to staff that it had agreed a deal to make custom chips for Amazon's (AMZN) web services business.

Rightmove (RMV.L)

Rupert Murdoch-backed property firm REA Group (REA.AX) has made a third offer to buy UK housing portal Rightmove, upping its bid to £6.1bn.

In a statement on the London Stock Exchange on Monday, Rightmove said its board would "carefully consider" this increased offer.

Rightmove chair Andrew Fisher said: "Based on the implied value and structure of REA's first and second indicative non-binding proposals, we considered these proposals to be uncertain, highly opportunistic and unattractive. Accordingly, the Board unanimously rejected them."

He said the company's board would "respond to the most recent proposal in due course."

Owen Wilson, CEO of REA, said in a statement on the Australian Securities Exchange that the company's increased offer "provides a combination of immediate value certainty in cash and at the same time gives Rightmove shareholders an increasing opportunity in core digital property and adjacencies where we have much expertise."