Taiwan’s Foxconn delivered stronger-than-expected first-quarter earnings as surging global demand for artificial intelligence infrastructure continued to reshape the economics of contract manufacturing. Net profit rose 19% year over year to T$49.92 billion, exceeding market expectations, and NewsTrackerToday underscores how decisively AI servers have overtaken consumer electronics as the company’s principal source of momentum.
Known formally as Hon Hai Precision Industry, Foxconn remains Apple’s largest iPhone assembler and the leading server manufacturing partner for Nvidia. This dual role places the company at the center of both consumer technology and the global buildout of AI infrastructure, with current growth increasingly concentrated in the latter.
Rotating CEO Michael Chiang described AI as a structural transformation rather than a temporary investment theme. Foxconn plans to increase capital expenditures by roughly 30% this year from T$174 billion as it expands production capacity for AI servers. In this aggressive spending cycle, NewsTrackerToday points to a manufacturing sector preparing for years of sustained demand from hyperscale data centers.
The company expects shipments of AI server racks to more than double during 2026. Demand remains particularly strong for GPU-based systems and ASIC servers built with custom chips designed by major cloud providers. Foxconn is also adapting its operating model, with some customers supplying critical components directly under consignment arrangements. Sophie Leclerc notes that this approach lowers working capital requirements while deepening strategic ties between manufacturers and cloud giants.
Foxconn’s production footprint is evolving alongside this expansion. Although most iPhones are still assembled in China, the company now manufactures the majority of devices sold in the United States in India. New facilities in Texas and Mexico are being built to produce AI servers for Nvidia. As these investments accelerate, NewsTrackerToday focuses on geographic diversification as a strategic hedge against tariffs, geopolitical friction, and supply-chain concentration.
Beyond electronics, Foxconn continues to pursue electric vehicles as a longer-term growth platform, though progress has been uneven. The sale of its former factory in Lordstown highlighted the difficulty of translating manufacturing expertise into a highly competitive automotive market. Despite robust earnings, Foxconn shares have gained only 6% this year, trailing the broader Taiwan market’s 44% advance. Isabella Moretti argues that investors are still evaluating whether Foxconn can convert its strategic role in AI infrastructure into sustained margin expansion. News Tracker Today turns that question into the central test for a manufacturer increasingly embedded in the next era of global computing.