Foxconn's server business has overtaken smartphones as its largest revenue driver, signaling a structural shift in the AI supply chain.
Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. reported a 34% revenue surge in the April-to-May period to NT$1.69 trillion ($53.6 billion), driven by demand for Nvidia Corp. servers that power the global AI infrastructure buildout. On a monthly basis, revenue jumped 40% in May, while analysts project a 32% increase for the June quarter.
"The AI server cycle is feeding growth beyond our initial expectations," Hon Hai said in a statement, adding that it expects business to expand substantially in 2026. The company's server segment has surpassed smartphones as its largest sales contributor over the past year, marking a shift for a manufacturer long known primarily as an Apple Inc. iPhone assembler.
The four largest cloud providers — Alphabet Inc., Amazon.com Inc., Meta Platforms Inc. and Microsoft Corp. — are earmarking $725 billion in combined AI spending this year, according to company disclosures. That capital is flowing through Nvidia's GPU supply chain to contract manufacturers like Hon Hai, which assembles the server racks housing Nvidia's accelerators. Hon Hai's May revenue of roughly NT$550 billion set a monthly record, according to Bloomberg calculations from the company's sales data.
The revenue beat reinforces the AI server build-out narrative at a time when investors continue to debate overcapacity risk and how the technology will be monetized. For Hon Hai, the question is whether demand can sustain its momentum beyond the June quarter as Nvidia transitions to its next-generation Vera platform. Nvidia announced at GTC Taipei that Vera — its first CPU designed for AI agents — is now in full production, with systems from builders including Foxconn available this fall. Vera features 88 Olympus cores and a LPDDR5X memory subsystem delivering up to 1.2TB/s of bandwidth, offering 1.8x faster task completion than x86 CPUs for agentic workloads.
Hon Hai's revenue trajectory also carries implications for the broader semiconductor supply chain. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., which fabricates Nvidia's chips and is the sole producer of the CoWoS advanced packaging used in AI accelerators, stands to benefit as server demand pulls more wafer starts. Nvidia's Grace CPUs have logged nearly 2.5 million shipments to date, providing a reference point for Vera's potential ramp.
Hon Hai shares trade on the Taiwan Stock Exchange under the ticker 2317. The company's shift toward AI server assembly could compress margins relative to smartphone manufacturing but offers higher revenue per unit and longer production cycles, factors investors will weigh as the AI infrastructure cycle matures.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.