By late March, Taiwan's equity market is offering a more nuanced read of the AI infrastructure boom. While accumulated revenue and year-over-year growth through February continue to point to strong structural demand, recent share price movements suggest that the market has begun to recalibrate expectations. The result is a growing divergence between backward-looking financial data and forward-looking capital market signals.
Chinese GPU developer Moore Threads has secured a CNY660 million (approx. US$95.5 million) contract to supply its KUAE intelligent computing cluster, marking a shift from standalone GPUs to large-scale AI training infrastructure.
Generative AI is moving from concept to commercial deployment, reshaping the global technology supply chain. It is shifting from a productivity tool to a core enterprise infrastructure. At the same time, layoffs are accelerating across Silicon Valley tech firms, Wall Street institutions, semiconductor companies, and Taiwan IC design houses.
Huawei's AI leadership is facing renewed turnover. Wang Yunhe, director of Huawei Noah's Ark Lab and a key architect behind PanguLM, has left the company after nearly nine years.


