Foxconn reports 40% quarterly sales jump, driven by cloud and AI server revenue

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Foxconn just posted numbers that would make most tech companies blush. The Taiwanese manufacturing giant reported unaudited consolidated revenue of T$2.513 trillion, roughly $78.71 billion, for the second quarter of 2026, a year-on-year increase of 39.8% that came in ahead of market expectations.

The driver is not iPhones. It is AI servers, and that shift tells you a lot about where the money in tech is actually flowing right now.

Cloud is the new assembly line

Cloud and networking products, the division that houses Foxconn’s booming AI server business, now represent the single largest or near-largest slice of the company’s revenue. In the first quarter of 2026, that segment was approaching half of total company revenue, a milestone that would have seemed unlikely just a few years ago for a company most people associate with building smartphones.

June alone was a record month. Revenue for that single month hit T$821.8 billion, a 52.1% jump compared to June of the prior year.

The Q2 result follows a strong Q1 2026, when Foxconn posted T$2.12 trillion in revenue, representing 29% year-on-year growth. The sequential acceleration from 29% to nearly 40% growth suggests demand for AI infrastructure is not plateauing, at least not yet.

Why Foxconn is uniquely positioned for this moment

Foxconn is Nvidia’s largest server manufacturing partner, which means it sits at the physical center of the AI hardware supply chain. Every time a hyperscale cloud provider orders a rack of Nvidia GPUs, there is a decent chance Foxconn built the server around them.

Foxconn’s management signaled continued momentum, expecting operations to grow both quarter-on-quarter and year-on-year in the third quarter of 2026. Full-year 2026 growth projections remain intact, anchored to sustained AI infrastructure demand from major cloud customers.

Management flagged “volatile” global political conditions as a risk factor, a reasonable hedge given that Foxconn operates manufacturing facilities across Asia and serves customers on multiple continents.

What this means for investors watching AI infrastructure plays

The geopolitical risk flag deserves more attention than it might get in a strong earnings report. Foxconn’s manufacturing geography and its dependence on US-designed chips flowing through Asian factories makes it sensitive to any escalation in trade tensions between the US and China. Investors watching Foxconn, or the broader AI hardware ecosystem, should treat that risk factor as a structural one rather than a quarterly footnote.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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