Foxconn is shifting its focus from consumer electronics to server systems built on Nvidia accelerators, a transition already visible in its reporting and stock performance. The Taiwanese company, known as Apple’s key iPhone manufacturer, is rapidly shifting its revenue structure towards Nvidia-powered servers. In August, revenue reached $19.8 billion, marking growth, and management confirmed expectations of sequential and year-on-year gains in Q3. Analyst consensus for the quarter stands at about 16.4%.
Nvidia remains the anchor customer for the entire Foxconn AI server line. On the consumer side, Nvidia increased its share of the discrete graphics cards to 94% in Q2 from 92%, while AMD dropped to 6%. This underscores Nvidia’s dominance across silicon, servers, and the broader ecosystem. The company’s weight in the S&P 500 is 7.08%, making it one of the key drivers of index performance and a source of volatility in ES futures. Therefore, supply-chain headlines tend to ripple through overall market dynamics.
This quarter, the server sector could double its revenue amid overheated AI infrastructure demand and decreasing consumer electronics demand. According to Taiwanese media and industry sources, AI server sales are already surpassing the company’s smartphone business. Annual AI server revenue could approach tens of billions of dollars, highlighting the company’s new growth drivers.
Changes in U.S. trade policy are also shaping strategy. Rising import tariffs, initiated under Donald Trump, have accelerated customer purchases in anticipation of higher costs, fueling a short-term surge in GPUs and server hardware shipments in Q2 and Q3. Foxconn is responding by expanding server hardware manufacturing in Texas and Wisconsin and investing in local logistics assets to speed up assembly of AI racks and liquid cooling systems.
Foxconn still projects sequential and annual revenue growth through the next quarter. While seasonal expectations of updating the iPhone line have historically supported sales momentum, they are now a secondary driver. The changing balance of revenue sources remains the main story of the coming quarters.
Geopolitics and exchange rate fluctuations remain Foxconn’s biggest risks, alongside the possibility of demand normalization once tariffs are fully priced in. Industry forecasts suggest discrete graphics processor shipments may gradually decline over 2024-2028. For Foxconn, this means greater sensitivity to Nvidia and Apple supply-chain news and the data center cycle, but also advantages in scale and geo-diversification of capacity.