
Foxconn sees robust AI demand as second-quarter profit tops forecast
The company said artificial intelligence server revenue is expected to leap more than 170% year-on-year in the coming quarter, though it also warned of uncertainty from US tariffs.
Nvidia's biggest server maker and Apple's top iPhone assembler has been riding a data centre boom, as cloud computing firms such as Amazon, Microsoft and Alphabet's Google spend billions of dollars to expand their AI infrastructure and research capacity. Cloud and networking products, which include servers, accounted for 41% of its revenue in the second quarter, while smart consumer products represented 35%, the company said. The contribution from the server business to its revenue is set to grow further in the current quarter, as Foxconn expects a slight decline in smart consumer electronics revenue. Some experts expect iPhone sales to slow after they surged in the June quarter ahead of the expected imposition of US tariffs. "AI has been the primary growth driver so far this year," Kathy Yang, rotating CEO of Foxconn, said on a call with media and analysts. She warned however that "close attention is needed due to the impact of changes in tariffs and exchange rates". The company said on Thursday its capital spending would rise more than 20% this year, as it plans to boost server production capacity in its manufacturing sites in Texas and Wisconsin. Global trade uncertainty and particularly the trade spat between the US and China could dim its outlook this year as it has a major manufacturing presence in China, though Washington and Beijing this week extended a tariff truce for another 90 days.
Most of the iPhones Foxconn makes for Apple are assembled in China, but the bulk of those sold in the US are now produced in India. The company is also building factories in Mexico and Texas to make AI servers for Nvidia.
Lordstown sold
Foxconn has also been looking to expand its footprint in electric vehicles, which the company sees as a major future growth generator, though that has not always gone smoothly. Earlier this month, Foxconn said it had struck a deal to sell a former car factory at Lordstown, Ohio, for $375 million that it purchased in 2022 to manufacture EVs. However, it will continue to occupy the facility. The company said the Ohio plant would be used to manufacture cloud-related products. The goal of manufacturing its Model C EV for the US market remains unchanged, although initial production will take place in Taiwan, Foxconn said. A source familiar with the matter told Reuters that the plant was sold to its partner SoftBank. Foxconn and SoftBank declined to comment. Overall, the company reported net profit for the April-June period of T$44.4 billion ($1.48 billion), higher than the consensus estimate of T$38.8 billion compiled by LSEG. Foxconn, formally Hon Hai Precision Industry, last month reported record second-quarter revenue on strong demand for AI products, but cautioned over geopolitical and exchange rate headwinds. Its shares have risen 8.4% so far this year, outperforming the broader Taiwan index's 5.2% gain. They closed up 0.5% on Thursday ahead of the earnings release. Elevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea. Tariffs, tantrums, and tech: How Trump's trade drama is keeping Indian IT on tenterhooks
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Business Standard
25 minutes ago
- Business Standard
Foxconn sees robust AI demand as second-quarter profit tops forecast
Foxconn on Thursday forecast a significant rise in third-quarter revenue as the world's biggest iPhone maker said it had for the first time made more money from its AI server business than from smart electronics last quarter. The company said artificial intelligence server revenue is expected to leap more than 170% year-on-year in the coming quarter, though it also warned of uncertainty from U.S. tariffs. Nvidia's biggest server maker and Apple's top iPhone assembler has been riding a data centre boom, as cloud computing firms such as Amazon, Microsoft and Alphabet's Google spend billions of dollars to expand their AI infrastructure and research capacity. Cloud and networking products, which include servers, accounted for 41% of its revenue in the second quarter, while smart consumer products represented 35%, the company said. The contribution from the server business to its revenue is set to grow further in the current quarter, as Foxconn expects a slight decline in smart consumer electronics revenue. Some experts expect iPhone sales to slow after they surged in the June quarter ahead of the expected imposition of U.S. tariffs. "AI has been the primary growth driver so far this year," Kathy Yang, rotating CEO of Foxconn, said on a call with media and analysts. She warned however that "close attention is needed due to the impact of changes in tariffs and exchange rates". The company said on Thursday its capital spending would rise more than 20% this year, as it plans to boost server production capacity in its manufacturing sites in Texas and Wisconsin. Global trade uncertainty and particularly the trade spat between the U.S. and China could dim its outlook this year as it has a major manufacturing presence in China, though Washington and Beijing this week extended a tariff truce for another 90 days. Most of the iPhones Foxconn makes for Apple are assembled in China, but the bulk of those sold in the U.S. are now produced in India. The company is also building factories in Mexico and Texas to make AI servers for Nvidia. LORDSTOWN SOLD Foxconn has also been looking to expand its footprint in electric vehicles, which the company sees as a major future growth generator, though that has not always gone smoothly. Earlier this month, Foxconn said it had struck a deal to sell a former car factory at Lordstown, Ohio, for $375 million that it purchased in 2022 to manufacture EVs. However, it will continue to occupy the facility. The company said the Ohio plant would be used to manufacture cloud-related products. The goal of manufacturing its Model C EV for the U.S. market remains unchanged, although initial production will take place in Taiwan, Foxconn said. A source familiar with the matter told Reuters that the plant was sold to its partner SoftBank. Foxconn and SoftBank declined to comment. Overall, the company reported net profit for the April-June period of T$44.4 billion ($1.48 billion), higher than the consensus estimate of T$38.8 billion compiled by LSEG. Foxconn, formally Hon Hai Precision Industry, last month reported record second-quarter revenue on strong demand for AI products, but cautioned over geopolitical and exchange rate headwinds. Its shares have risen 8.4% so far this year, outperforming the broader Taiwan index's 5.2% gain. They closed up 0.5% on Thursday ahead of the earnings release.


Time of India
29 minutes ago
- Time of India
Apple Watch just got a stunning upgrade, new blood oxygen feature launches today - what it means for you
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Business Standard
an hour ago
- Business Standard
Nvidia's Trump tax of little worry to investors eyeing AI riches
By Ryan Vlastelica and Carmen Reinicke President Donald Trump's move to extract a 15% sales tax from Nvidia Corp. on certain semiconductors sold in China did nothing to damp investor enthusiasm for the world's most valuable company. A look at balance-sheet math goes a long way to explaining why. In the first quarter, Nvidia said it sold $5.5 billion in products to China, roughly 13% of its total. The chips exposed to the Trump tax accounted for about 80% of that, or just under $5 billion. That means the Santa Clara, California-based firm could send some $700 million per quarter to the Treasury — hardly chump change. But for a company that churns out $20 billion in profit a quarter and increases sales by a similar amount — a rate of growth it's sustained throughout the AI boom — paying the tax barely registers. 'I don't think it's that big of an issue,' said Larry Tentarelli, founder of Blue Chip Daily. 'If it was their overall revenue base, it would be a big problem. But because China is not the biggest proportion of their revenues, it's a speed bump.' Nvidia shares slipped Monday after the tax was disclosed, then rallied to a fresh record Tuesday in a broad market advance. The chipmaker's shares have nearly doubled since early April, pushing its market value past $4.4 trillion. Similarly, Advanced Micro Devices Inc., which agreed to the same tax, closed at the highest in more than a year on Wednesday, bringing year-to-date gains to 50%. Shares of both companies were slightly higher in early trading in New York on Thursday. Nvidia reports second quarter earnings on Aug. 27. Analysts expect it will report earnings growth of 44% on a 53% surge in revenue to $45.9 billion. That's not to say the clouds have completely lifted in China. Bloomberg News reported this week that Beijing has encouraged local firms to avoid using Nvidia's chips — a move that could limit sales. And worries abound that chipmakers will increasingly become ensnared in federal trade policy or that China could make a more formal recommendation to ban certain US chips altogether. 'It is a hard game to know how this will play out. I would almost consider the stocks absent this news,' said Michael Matousek, head trader at U.S. Global Investors Inc. 'If you already liked them, there's potential for upside from China, but there are risks this could change again.' None of that, though, seems to register among investors betting that red-hot demand for AI infrastructure will continue to burn. The trend has lifted shares of Nvidia from their April lows alongside Magnificent Seven peers deemed AI winners, including Meta Platforms Inc. and Microsoft Corp. The tax news is 'mostly empty calories,' Citigroup's Christopher Danely wrote in a note this week on AMD. 'We view this as not material given the low margins of these products, and these AI GPUs could be banned in China again.' At Bernstein, analyst Stacy Rasgon worries about the precedent the Trump tax sets. The arrangement 'might raise some money, but doesn't seem to address any strategic issues beyond a grab for dollars,' he wrote in a note published Aug. 11. Regardless, Nvidia shares will rise or fall on its ability to deliver sales of cutting-edge chips, most notably its Blackwell products. 'What's more important is the trajectory of Blackwell and whether or not Blackwell is going to meet or exceed expectations,' said Melissa Otto of Visible Alpha LLC. 'That's what the market has priced in. That's where we see the biggest uplift in demand and growth. And so that is ultimately what is going to drive the earnings expectations and valuation for the stock.' That major question, along with the trade uncertainty and Nvidia's rally do leave the shares exposed to profit-taking ahead of the Aug. 27 report. 'I'm not going to bet on whether this stays a positive,' said Alvin Nguyen, senior analyst at Forrester. 'There have been so many rapid changes, there's still so much uncertainty, and we need to see stability in trade.'