--- title: "Quanta sees robust AI demand" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/272858702.md" description: "Quanta Computer Inc. anticipates a significant growth in its AI-related business, projecting at least triple-digit percentage growth this year. The company plans to increase capital expenditure, primarily in the US and Thailand, to meet strong AI demand. Quanta's chairman stated that AI will continue to grow rapidly, entering a \"blooming era.\" AI servers are expected to account for 80% of total server revenue this year. Meanwhile, Asustek is reallocating resources to focus on AI and commercial PCs, while addressing challenges in the smartphone sector and the impact of US tariffs positively." datetime: "2026-01-16T16:05:59.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/272858702.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/272858702.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/272858702.md) --- # Quanta sees robust AI demand ## PARADIGM SHIFT: Asustek is reallocating its resources as AI demand crowds out supply of chips and other components for non-AI businesses, its chairman said Quanta Computer Inc’s (廣達) artificial intelligence (AI)-related business is expected to grow by at least a triple-digit percentage this year, prompting the company to consider hiking its capital expenditure, mostly in the US and Thailand, company executive vice president Mike Yang (楊麒令) said on Thursday. Quanta’s order visibility extends into next year on the back of strong AI demand, said Yang, who is also the president of the firm’s server manufacturing arm Quanta Cloud Technology Inc (雲達). **‘NO AI BUBBLE’** “It is clear that there is no such thing as an AI bubble,” Yang said. The construction of data centers is continuing and server manufacturers are still expanding capacity to meet rising demand, Yang said. Over the next one to three years, AI would not only continue to grow rapidly, but enter a “blooming era,” Quanta chairman Barry Lam (林百里) said, adding that Quanta has secured a competitive edge by successfully transitioning from air-cooled AI servers to liquid-cooled supercomputers. Quanta expects to begin shipping servers powered by Nvidia’s latest Rubin platform in August, with revenue contribution this year likely to be limited, as it is still in its early rollout phase, he said. As the system design is largely carried over from the GB200 and GB300 platforms, overall production schedules and deployment efficiency are expected to improve over time, he added. Quanta is focusing on Level 11 orders, with some projects extending to Level 12, while only a small portion of general-purpose servers remain in standalone configurations, Yang said. AI server revenue is on track to post triple-digit growth this year, while general-purpose servers should post a solid performance, he said. The company aims to double capacity this year, primarily for the production of Level 11 servers after reviewing expansion plans and execution schedules over the past two to three years, he said. Overall this year, AI servers are expected to account for about 80 percent of the company’s total server revenue, Yang said. Regarding overseas deployment, Quanta is cautious about expanding capacity in Tennessee due to power supply constraints, he said. In Mexico, Quanta’s server node factory has entered volume production this quarter, he said. **ASUSTEK** Separately, Asustek Computer Inc (華碩) chairman Jonney Shih (施崇棠) yesterday said that the company would continue providing services to its smartphone users, responding to a reporter’s question about whether the company is halting its money-losing smartphone business. Asustek must reallocate resources quickly to brace for an important paradigm shift ahead and allocate more resources to develop commercial PCs and a wide range of AI-related devices, Shih said. With memorychip prices surging, Asustek on Jan. 5 raised distribution prices for some computer models, as chip supply constraints are expected to continue, with semiconductor makers prioritizing high-bandwidth chips for AI servers over PC chips. Addressing concerns that the AI boom has crowded out resources, such as high-bandwidth memory and other components, for non-AI businesses, Shih said the situation has indeed put pressure on non-AI products, but Asustek has long believed that challenges also present opportunities. Regarding the newly announced US tariffs on Taiwan, Shih said the overall impact on Asustek’s operations is positive, and the company has a flexible global manufacturing footprint to respond to unexpected changes and shifts in the global supply chain. ## Related News & Research - [How network intelligence can help businesses anticipate risks, ensure uptime, and deliver on AI](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286815400.md) - [Jim Cramer Says Nvidia Should Stay Inside China’s AI Boom, Not Walk Away](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286804523.md) - [Four years after ChatGPT, Xiaohongshu’s AI restraint gives way to urgency](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286863242.md) - [17:59 ETGargle Launches AI-Enhanced Local Visibility Strategy for Dentists](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286823698.md) - [INSEAD exposes Singapore's immersive learning gap](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286823627.md)