VNET Group shares spiked sharply in pre-open trading, rising 14.8% after reports emerged that China’s National Development and Reform Commission is preparing a blueprint to invest about 2 trillion yuan - roughly $295 billion - over the next five years to create a nationwide network of interconnected computing hubs. State-owned enterprises are expected to play a central role in implementing the plan.
As one of China’s largest private, carrier-neutral internet data center operators, VNET stands out as a direct potential beneficiary of large, policy-directed spending on data center infrastructure. The market reaction came on top of an already favorable operational backdrop for the company.
VNET’s most recent quarterly report showed revenue rising 20% year-over-year to 2.69 billion yuan for Q1 2026, while adjusted EBITDA increased 31% year-over-year. Management also reaffirmed its full-year revenue guidance in the range of RMB 11.5 to 11.8 billion.
Analyst support added further momentum. Jefferies reiterated a Buy rating and maintained a $24.79 price target, referencing an "unprecedented wave of gigawatt-scale orders" from leading cloud service providers in the first half of 2026. Market mechanics likely intensified the move; elevated short interest, representing more than 12% of the float, probably contributed to the pre-market surge through forced short covering.
The rally in VNET was not an isolated event. Peer GDS Holdings also saw a sharp advance on the same China data center investment news, signaling a broader sector re-rating for Chinese data center operators listed in the United States. On the broader equity fronts, the NASDAQ advanced 0.9% and the S&P 500 rose 0.3%, providing a modest market tailwind that was small relative to the company- and sector-specific drivers behind VNET’s move.
Other elements noted by the market included the presence of a CATL-affiliated strategic investor that holds about 38% of VNET’s shares. Together, the prospect of large government-directed capital spending on data centers, VNET’s solid Q1 execution, concentrated strategic ownership, and supportive analyst commentary formed a confluence of factors that pushed the stock to $10.18. That level remains below the company’s 52-week high of $14.48, leaving room for further recovery if the policy blueprint is formally adopted.
Market context and immediate implications
The reported NDRC initiative, if completed and implemented as described, would represent a major government-led investment program focused on computing infrastructure. For listed Chinese data center operators like VNET and GDS, the combination of policy support and robust demand from cloud customers is being priced into equities, contributing to the sector-wide move.
At the same time, market dynamics such as high short interest and analyst positioning are amplifying price movements, increasing volatility around event-driven news for companies in this space.