GlobalWafers said on May 4 that its first-quarter performance reflected a transitional period, as short-term cost pressures and capacity expansion weighed on margins even as demand tied to artificial intelligence (AI) and high-performance computing began to strengthen.
Flex shares rose 13% in after-hours trading on May 5 after the electronics manufacturing services (EMS) provider forecast fiscal 2027 results above Wall Street expectations and announced plans to spin off its Cloud and Power Infrastructure segment into a separate publicly traded company.
AMD's fiscal first-quarter 2026 earnings call was not just a victory lap for another data center beat. It was a strategic argument from management: AI infrastructure is no longer only an accelerator story. It is becoming a full compute-platform story, where CPUs, GPUs, memory, software, and rack-scale systems all have to move together.
MediaTek subsidiary Airoha Technology said its first-quarter 2026 performance met expectations, driven by continued improvement in product mix and accelerating demand across its optical communications, Ethernet, and fixed broadband businesses tied to AI infrastructure expansion.
Synnex Technology International Corp. reported record consolidated results for the first quarter as accelerating AI commercialization drove triple-digit growth in data-center products and broad-based gains across its Asia-Pacific markets. The distributor said it is accelerating a shift toward an AI supply-chain integration platform and an MSP digital-intelligence offering to capture higher-value business as AI applications expand.
Supermicro's third-quarter of fiscal 2026 gross margins snapped back to 10.1% non-GAAP, up from 6.4% in the second quarter of fiscal 2026. CEO Charles Liang attributed the recovery to product mix improvement and growth in the company's Data Center Building Block Solutions (DCBBS) business. The earnings call transcript, however, tells a simpler story. The single customer that drove 63% of revenue in the second quarter fell to 27% in the third quarter. That mix shift — toward higher-margin enterprise and neocloud buyers — did most of the work.
Rising demand for generative AI is prompting major Chinese cloud providers to raise prices for large-scale services and data products, with implications for global AI users and developers, as usage-based billing and efficiency become central to costs and deployment decisions across international markets and could soon influence provider strategies worldwide.
Chicony Power's first-quarter performance signals supply-chain resilience and potential upside for global notebook, server, and satellite power markets, as the company forecasts second-quarter revenue growth driven by inventory pull-ins, rising average selling prices, and expanding satellite and AI power-supply businesses serving international customers.
Weblink International Inc. reported record consolidated revenue of NT$7.78 billion (US$247 million) for the first quarter of 2026, up 19.8% year on year, and net profit after tax of NT$104 million, rising 26.9%, executives said. The firm attributed the results to a business PC refresh cycle, inventory stocking ahead of demand, and stronger pricing in memory components.
Acer E-Enabling Service Business reported first-quarter 2026 revenue of NT$2.96 billion (US$93.9 million), up nearly 15% year on year, and net profit after tax of NT$199 million, delivering earnings per share of NT$4.8 and record revenue and profit for the period. The firm said cloud AI project services expanded rapidly, with project volume increasing nearly 40% year on year as many engagements moved from proof-of-concept into production.
Supermicro CEO Charles Liang used the opening of his fiscal third quarter of 2026 earnings call to address a topic unrelated to revenue or margins: the DOJ indictment of former employees for allegedly smuggling AI servers equipped with Nvidia GPUs to China through Southeast Asian transshipment networks.
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