Pegatron Corp. is accelerating its server business ambitions, with the company’s technology chief saying strong customer demand may help it achieve its $2 billion revenue target before the planned 2027 deadline.
The Taiwan-based manufacturer, which entered the server business in 2021, has seen exponential growth in this segment last year. Current growth is driven by medium-sized cloud service providers and smaller data center clients, including ongoing projects with major semiconductor companies, according to Technology Chief Yann-Jiun Shue.
“Even if the scale isn’t as big as a football field, it can still be the size of a basketball court,” Shue said, indicating the substantial business opportunities available in smaller markets not dominated by large cloud service providers.
Pegatron’s server division, now employing 600 people, serves clients across the Americas, Middle East, Southeast Asia and Taiwan, with efforts underway to expand into European markets.
The company recently showcased its latest AI server at Nvidia’s GTC conference, featuring the GB300 NVL72 platform, HGX B300 NVL16, and MGX servers with RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition GPUs. It’s also developing liquid-cooled server solutions for a semiconductor client seeking to meet ESG goals, with shipments expected to begin in the second quarter.
May Wang, Pegatron’s 18th Business Group Vice President, noted that while many customers are still experimenting with earlier GPU architectures, the company anticipates widespread deployment of water-cooled data centers between late 2025 and early 2026.
Pegatron’s strategic push includes opening a new office in Santa Clara, California, directly across from Nvidia’s headquarters, to strengthen its North American presence amid growing demand for AI server infrastructure.