- Foxconn Q1 profit T$49.92 bln vs estimated T$48.88 bln
- Tech giant forecasts strong revenue growth for full year
- Foxconn's shares have underperformed broader index this year
TAIPEI, May 14 (Reuters) - Taiwan's Foxconn, the world's largest contract electronics maker, reported on Thursday a 19% rise in first-quarter profit versus the same period a year earlier, beating expectations due to strong global demand for AI products.
Net profit for January-March for Nvidia's biggest server maker and Apple's top iPhone assembler was T$49.92 billion ($1.58 billion), versus a LSEG consensus estimate of T$48.88 billion.
In an earnings release, it stuck to its previous forecast of "strong" growth for revenue this year and said it also saw strong demand for AI servers. The company does not give numeric forecasts.
“AI remains the most important growth driver this year," rotating CEO Michael Chiang said on an earnings call. He added that major cloud service providers have recently raised capital expenditure plans for this year.
"AI is not a short-term theme, but a structural transformation of the industry."
The company expects its capital expenditures to grow by 30% this year from last year's T$174 billion as it expands manufacturing capacity for AI servers.
Foxconn said it expects AI server rack shipments to more than double for the full year.
It added that demand for graphics processing unit servers and application-specific integrated circuits (ASIC) servers, which use customized chips designed by major cloud service providers, remains very strong, and that it also expects general-purpose servers to grow, driven by AI data center deployments.
It said some cloud and networking products, particularly ASIC servers, have shifted to a consignment model in which customers provide key components instead of Foxconn purchasing them directly.
"We remain optimistic about our full-year performance," Chiang said, while adding that geopolitical developments, supply chain adjustments and fluctuations in raw material costs could have an impact on the industry.
Foxconn, formally called Hon Hai Precision Industry, in April reported a 30% on-year jump in first-quarter revenue.
Most of the iPhones Foxconn makes for Apple are assembled in China, but it now produces the bulk of those sold in the United States in India. The company is also building factories in Mexico and Texas to make AI servers for Nvidia.
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.
In August, Foxconn said it had struck a deal to sell a former car factory in Lordstown, Ohio, for $375 million, including its machinery. It had purchased the plant in 2022 to manufacture EVs.
The company's shares have risen 6% so far this year, underperforming the broader Taiwan index's 44% gain.
Foxconn shares closed 2.6% lower on Thursday ahead of the earnings release.
($1 = 31.5020 Taiwan dollars)
Reporting by Ben Blanchard, Wen-Yee Lee and Yimou Lee; Editing by Jacqueline Wong, Jamie Freed and Thomas Derpinghaus
Source: Reuters