Economy April 5, 2026

Foxconn Q1 revenue jumps nearly 30% on AI server demand but flags Middle East volatility

Record March driven by AI infrastructure and iPhone sales; company warns geopolitical tensions could weigh on 2026 outlook

By Ajmal Hussain
Foxconn Q1 revenue jumps nearly 30% on AI server demand but flags Middle East volatility

Foxconn reported a 29.7% year-on-year rise in first-quarter revenue to T2.13 trillion ($66.60 billion), driven primarily by demand for AI data-center equipment and stronger iPhone-related sales. The company said growth may continue into the second quarter but cautioned that the ongoing conflict in the Middle East and related disruptions to logistics and economic stability present a major external risk ahead of its full earnings release on May 14.

Key Points

  • Foxconn reported first-quarter revenue of T2.13 trillion ($66.60 billion), a 29.7% year-on-year increase driven by AI data-center equipment and stronger iPhone-related sales.
  • March revenue hit a record T803.7 billion, up 45.6% year-on-year; cloud and networking and smart consumer electronics were primary growth drivers.
  • Company warned that geopolitical volatility from the Middle East conflict is a major external risk, with potential impacts on logistics, supply chains, and economic stability - affecting technology hardware and shipping-sensitive sectors.

Overview

Foxconn Technology Co Ltd (TW:2354), the world’s largest contract electronics manufacturer, posted a 29.7% increase in first-quarter revenue year-on-year, the company said on Sunday. Company executives attributed the rise largely to strong orders for AI infrastructure and continued demand for consumer electronics including the iPhone.

Quarterly results and composition

Revenue for the quarter reached T2.13 trillion ($66.60 billion), a figure that narrowly trailed the T$2.148 trillion LSEG SmartEstimate. The expansion was led by the cloud and networking division, which benefited from the global build-out of AI data centers and demand for AI racks. The "smart consumer electronics" segment, which encompasses the iPhone, also recorded notable gains following recent product launches.

March was a standout month for the company, posting record monthly revenue of T803.7 billion, a 45.6% increase compared with the same month a year earlier. The company signaled it expects momentum in AI racks to continue through the second quarter.

Geopolitical concerns and guidance

Despite operational strength, the firm offered a guarded outlook. Chairman Young Liu described the global political environment as "volatile," highlighting the ongoing conflict in the Middle East as the company’s chief external challenge. He said the war has created a geopolitical "straitjacket" that the firm must navigate, with impacts on logistics and economic stability singled out as critical items to "monitor" ahead of the full earnings release on May 14.

The company also noted the conflict’s potential to disrupt shipping routes and broader supply chains, an area of concern for a contract manufacturer with complex global operations.

Market reaction and investor context

Foxconn’s stock performance has not mirrored the revenue surge. Shares have fallen 16% year-to-date, underperforming the broader Taiwan benchmark, which has risen about 12% over the same period. Market participants have applied what the article describes as a "geopolitical discount" to the stock, reflecting investor worries about exposure to supply chain interruptions and the possibility of a "non-linear" economic slowdown in key markets including the UK and Europe.

Taiwan’s markets were scheduled to reopen on Tuesday following a holiday break, and investors were expected to assess whether the record March figures were sufficient to overcome the geopolitical concerns reflected in the share price.

Partnerships and identity

The company, formally known as Hon Hai Precision Industry (TW: 2317), is a partner to major technology firms including Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL) and NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA). Those relationships intersect with the firm’s AI and consumer electronics businesses, which together underpinned the quarter’s strong revenue performance.

Near-term focus

Management emphasized that while AI-driven demand is supporting margin expansion and sales momentum, the company will closely watch geopolitical developments in the Middle East, especially as the conflict approaches a reported mid-April breaking point. How Foxconn manages volatile shipping routes and sustains its AI-related margin gains will be central to investors’ assessment of its 2026 valuation.


Full financials are expected with the company's complete earnings release on May 14.

Risks

  • Escalation of the conflict in the Middle East could further disrupt global logistics and shipping routes, posing a risk to contract manufacturing and supply-chain-reliant sectors.
  • Investor concerns over exposure to supply chain interruptions and the prospect of a "non-linear" economic slowdown in key markets like the UK and Europe could continue to weigh on stock performance.
  • Geopolitical uncertainty creates a "straitjacket" that may limit the company’s ability to capitalize on AI-driven momentum if disruptions to operations or demand arise.

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