---
title: "Telecom Industry Bets on Automation to Tackle AI Squeeze"
type: "News"
locale: "en"
url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/283842434.md"
description: "Telecom equipment manufacturers and cellular providers are facing economic challenges due to rising component costs and shrinking customer budgets. Global telecom capital expenditures are projected to decline by 2% in 2026, prompting companies like Verizon and Telefonica to reduce spending. The semiconductor supply chain shift towards AI hardware has led to significant cost inflation, impacting profitability. To navigate these pressures, the industry is prioritizing software automation and transitioning to advanced autonomous networks, despite the challenges posed by the 6G transition and high costs of AI integration."
datetime: "2026-04-23T13:18:13.000Z"
locales:
  - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/283842434.md)
  - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/283842434.md)
  - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/283842434.md)
---

# Telecom Industry Bets on Automation to Tackle AI Squeeze

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Telecom equipment manufacturers and cellular providers are caught in an unforgiving economic cycle. As the global semiconductor supply chain pivots to feed the booming demand for AI hardware, telecom vendors face soaring component costs while simultaneously grappling with shrinking customer budgets.

To survive this margin squeeze, the industry is accelerating a strategic shift toward advanced software automation.

### **Capex and revenue crunch**

Compounding these inflationary pressures is a stark reality on the demand side: Telecom operators are tightening their belts. Global telecom capital expenditures are projected to decline by 2% in 2026.

Stefan Pongratz, VP at Dell’Oro Group, told EE Times that “2026 will be a challenging year for the telco suppliers, especially those with a stronger wireless focus.” Explaining the pullback, Pongratz noted that “mobile data traffic is not growing as quickly as in the 4G era, and 5G is also providing a greater capacity boost.”

Without explosive growth to justify aggressive spending, giants such as Verizon have reduced 2026 capital expenditures to between $16 billion and $16.5 billion, down from $17 billion in 2025. Telefonica similarly aims to lower its capital intensity to 11% by 2030.

### **Supply chain shock**

As budgets shrink, input costs are skyrocketing. The reallocation of foundry capacity toward AI processors has unleashed severe cost inflation across broader chip categories.

Spot prices for memory modules critical to base stations and consumer premises equipment have surged by more than 600% in recent months, with fourth-quarter contract prices jumping nearly 80%. In some low- to mid-tier routers, memory now accounts for over 20% of the total bill of materials, up from just 3% a year earlier.

The toll on corporate profitability is already evident. Swedish infrastructure provider Ericsson recently reported a staggering 79% plunge in net income to 887 million Swedish kronor (US$97 million) for the first quarter of 2026, alongside a 10% decline in net sales.

The company noted that sales in North America declined due to a short-term reallocation of customer spend and accelerated investments in the prior year. While currency exchange rates and restructuring expenses contributed to the decline, the company specifically identified component inflation as a primary factor affecting profitability.

CEO Börje Ekholm explicitly linked the margin pressure to the semiconductor squeeze, stating the “AI boom is increasing input costs.” Competing for limited foundry capacity against massive cloud providers leaves telecom vendors with diminished negotiating leverage.

Furthermore, the emerging buzz around AI-integrated radio access networks (AI-RAN) offers no immediate financial relief. Pongratz observed that these investments are currently changing the mix of operator spending rather than growing the overall capital expenditure budget.

### **Automation as the strategic imperative**

Faced with this dual threat of surging hardware costs and a stagnant revenue pool, vendors and operators are making software automation their strategic imperative.

“The slower the growth, the higher the pressure,” Pongratz explained. “So, if operator revenue continues to grow around 1% annually and mobile/fixed data traffic continues to grow while network complexities/energy costs are rising, there is more pressure to automate.”

The industry is aggressively transitioning toward advanced autonomous networks, such as Level 4 (L4) Autonomous RAN.

“L4 is not just about cutting opex—it is about the pressure to automate in a slow-growth world,” Pongratz stated. He further elaborated that “if operator revenue continues to grow around 1% annually and mobile/fixed data traffic continues to grow while network complexities/energy costs are rising, there is more pressure to automate.”

While mid-sized operators may not pioneer these deployments, Pongratz noted that “the operators agree the end destination is automation with minimal human intervention”.

### **Navigating the 6G paradox**

Looking ahead to the 6G transition, this architectural shift presents a structural paradox. Embedding AI capabilities directly into the radio access network requires the same highly sought-after semiconductor components that are currently experiencing price spikes.

Because cell sites operate under strict cost controls and tight power budgets, deploying power-intensive compute hardware is difficult to justify financially. This cost-power constraint could slow the rollout of AI-enabled 6G infrastructure, causing operators to weigh investments carefully.

Concerns persist regarding the performance-per-watt gap between general-purpose GPUs and custom silicon for these specific workloads. To offset the cost of new hardware and manage power consumption, vendors are developing software to improve operational efficiency and spectral utilization.

While mid-sized operators are unlikely to pioneer these deployments immediately, Pongratz pointed out that “the operators agree the end destination is automation with minimal human intervention.” Rather than a sudden shift, the industry expects “gradual progress, followed by faster adoption once the early adopters show the ROI,” he argued. Ultimately, the long-term viability of telecom infrastructure providers hinges on mastering this automation, delivering leaner, hyper-efficient networks to operators that can no longer afford to spend their way to growth.

* * *

##### ​See also:

MWC 2026 Concludes as Telcos Pivot to AI

Nvidia Advances AI-Native Strategy at MWC

At MWC, Ericsson Details AI-Native 6G Timeline

Nokia Bets the Network on Nvidia in AI and 6G Pivot

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