Infineon's €73 Record Caps Strategy Overhaul: No More Megafabs, AI Revenue to Hit €2.5bn
22.05.2026 - 19:22:06 | boerse-global.de
Infineon shares have stormed to a fresh all-time high of €73.19, gaining nearly 6% in a single session, as the chipmaker unveiled an aggressive AI revenue target and a sweeping corporate restructuring that marks the end of an era of factory expansion. The stock has nearly doubled since the start of the year and has surged 105% over the past twelve months, leaving even bullish analysts scrambling to update their models.
The centrepiece of the strategic pivot is a forecast that AI infrastructure revenue will reach €1.5 billion in the current fiscal year 2026 and climb to around €2.5 billion by 2027 — a projection that Deutsche Bank analysts believe could prove conservative, with some seeing a potential push towards the €3 billion mark. That ambition is backed by an overhaul of the company’s operating structure: from 1 July 2026, Infineon will consolidate its four reporting segments into three — Automotive, Power Systems and Edge Systems — shortening decision-making and sharpening the focus on energy-efficient solutions for data centres and AI servers.
One day after the segment reshuffle takes effect, Infineon will open the "Smart Power Fab" in Dresden, the largest single investment in its history. The €5 billion wafer plant, backed by roughly €1 billion in subsidies from the European Chips Act, will create around 1,000 jobs and produce power semiconductors and analog/mixed-signal chips on 300-millimetre wafers for data centres, electric vehicles and renewable energy infrastructure. Crucially, production is already running a quarter ahead of schedule, driven by a massive order backlog for power semiconductors as hyperscalers scramble for AI compute capacity.
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The Dresden facility marks the last major greenfield project for the foreseeable future. Production chief Alexander Gorski has confirmed that Infineon has no plans to build additional large-scale fabs after completing current commitments, instead concentrating on optimising output at its existing sites. The company is betting that gallium nitride-based solutions, which already achieve conversion efficiencies above 96% in data centre power supplies, will keep it at the forefront of the energy efficiency race.
That strategic discipline is winning plaudits from the Street, even though the valuation leaves little room for error. The stock currently trades at a price-to-earnings multiple of roughly 54 times this year’s earnings, though that ratio is expected to compress as the Dresden fab’s capacity contributes to profits from 2027 onwards. The average analyst target still stands at around €66, but several houses have already thrown their weight behind the rally: Citigroup lifted its price objective to €80, while Jefferies and JPMorgan have targets in the €74–75 range — meaning the current share price is already within striking distance of their forecasts.
Should the stock pull back in the short term, the 50-day moving average at approximately €50 offers a first layer of technical support. For now, though, the momentum is firmly upward. Infineon is targeting total group revenue of more than €16 billion in fiscal 2026, with a segment-result margin of around 20%. The drag from a slower-than-expected electric-vehicle adoption rate continues to weigh on high-voltage components, but market-share gains in software-defined vehicle platforms and a robust industrial business are helping to offset the weakness. With a new organisational blueprint, a fully funded fab and an AI revenue pipeline that could double inside a year, the Munich-based group is making a clear bet that the next chapter of growth will be written in data centres, not on the highway.
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