Stock Markets March 17, 2026

Foxconn Stock Slides After Q4 Profit Miss Despite Robust AI-Driven Revenue Outlook

Record fourth-quarter sales tied to AI demand fail to offset margin pressure and higher taxes, prompting caution even as company forecasts strong growth

By Hana Yamamoto NVDA AAPL
Foxconn Stock Slides After Q4 Profit Miss Despite Robust AI-Driven Revenue Outlook
NVDA AAPL

Foxconn (Hon Hai Precision) saw its shares decline after reporting a 2% fall in quarterly profit that missed expectations, even as the company posted record fourth-quarter revenue driven by AI-related demand. The profit drop reflected softer margins and a higher tax burden. Management projected strong revenue growth for the first quarter and full year on outsized AI demand, while warning of potential global economic and geopolitical risks including the war in the Middle East.

Key Points

  • Foxconn posted a 2% decline in quarterly profit that missed market expectations despite record fourth-quarter revenue.
  • Shares fell 1.9% to T$212.50 following the earnings announcement.
  • Management forecasted strong revenue growth for Q1 and the full year, driven by AI-related demand, while flagging global economic and geopolitical risks.

Shares of Hon Hai Precision, widely known as Foxconn, fell after the contract electronics giant reported quarterly results that disappointed the market on the profit line despite a strong sales performance. The company's Taiwan-listed stock (TW:2317) declined 1.9% to T$212.50 following the announcement.

Foxconn reported a 2% decline in fourth-quarter profit, a result that came in below market expectations. That earnings shortfall weighed on the share price even as the group achieved record revenue for the quarter, supported by robust demand tied to artificial intelligence applications.

The divergence between top-line strength and bottom-line performance was driven by two factors highlighted in the results release: weaker margins during the quarter and a higher tax cost. Those items erased some of the benefit from the surge in revenue that management attributed to AI-fueled demand across its server and device manufacturing businesses.

Company commentary on the outlook framed the near-term picture as one of continued expansion. Foxconn projected "strong growth" for both first-quarter revenue and full-year sales, reiterating expectations that demand related to AI would be a key growth driver. At the same time, the company signaled caution by identifying potential economic and geopolitical headwinds on a global scale, explicitly noting the war in the Middle East as a risk factor.

The report reiterated Foxconn's position as a major supplier in two critical segments referenced by the company: it is the largest server manufacturer for NVIDIA (NVDA) and a primary assembler of Apple Inc's (AAPL) iPhone. Those customer relationships help explain the sensitivity of Foxconn's revenue to developments in AI hardware demand and the broader consumer electronics cycle.

Investors responded to the mixed message in the quarterly results - record revenue and a strong outlook versus a profit miss and increased costs - by selling shares, at least in the immediate aftermath of the earnings release. The company faces the task of converting top-line momentum into consistent margin improvement while navigating the risks it flagged.


Key points

  • Foxconn reported a 2% drop in quarterly profit that missed expectations, while recording its highest fourth-quarter revenue on strong AI-driven demand.
  • Shares fell 1.9% to T$212.50 following the earnings release, reflecting investor concern over the profit shortfall.
  • Management forecasted "strong growth" for both the first quarter and the full year, citing outsized AI-related demand but warned of global economic and geopolitical headwinds.

Sectors impacted - Technology hardware, server manufacturing, and consumer electronics supply chain.

Risks and uncertainties

  • Softer margins and a higher tax cost reduced profitability despite record revenue - a risk to near-term earnings resilience for hardware suppliers and contract manufacturers.
  • Global economic and geopolitical headwinds, including the war in the Middle East, could disrupt demand or supply chains and affect technology and electronics markets.
  • Execution risk in converting AI-driven revenue growth into sustainable margin improvement amid cost pressures.

Risks

  • Softer margins and higher tax costs reducing profitability, impacting hardware suppliers and contract manufacturers.
  • Global economic and geopolitical headwinds, including the war in the Middle East, that could disrupt demand or supply chains in the technology and consumer electronics sectors.
  • Challenge of sustaining margin improvement even as AI-driven revenue grows.

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