That confidence was underpinned by several concrete product and partnership milestones earlier in the year:
Data centre revenue was historically a minor contributor for STMicroelectronics, whose business has long been anchored in automotive and industrial semiconductors. The new $1 billion target transforms AI infrastructure into a material growth pillar, not an optional side bet.
During its Q1 FY 2026 earnings call, management framed AI data centre and low-Earth-orbit satellites as the primary incremental growth vectors for the year and beyond . The company has anchored its AI data centre strategy around three system-level domains:
Within the $1 billion revenue target, approximately 40% is expected to come from analog and power products, while 60% will come from microcontrollers, RF, and optical cable-related components . This mix illustrates how ST is monetizing the AI build-out across multiple product lines rather than through a single blockbuster chip.
STMicroelectronics’ target revision is more than a company-specific story — it is a leading indicator that the AI infrastructure spending wave is broadening well beyond GPU and custom ASIC suppliers.
Three implications stand out:
STMicroelectronics’ upgrade provides hard evidence that hyperscaler capex continues to flow forcefully into the semiconductor supply chain. With the potential to hit $2 billion in data centre revenue by 2027, the company is positioning itself as a core beneficiary of the AI infrastructure super-cycle — and signalling that the cycle still has significant room to run.
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