Flex to spin off AI data-center infrastructure unit into listed company


FILE PHOTO: A message reading "AI artificial intelligence", a keyboard, and robot hands are seen in this illustration taken January 27, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

NEW ⁠YORK, May 5 (Reuters) - Contract manufacturer Flex on Tuesday ⁠outlined plans for a strategic break-up to ‌monetize its exposure to artificial intelligence, saying it would spin off its cloud and power infrastructure business into a separate ​publicly traded company by early 2027.

The ⁠split, which is subject ⁠to regulatory approvals, will create an AI data-center group ⁠alongside ‌its core manufacturing operations. The separate business will focus on supplying power, cooling ⁠and integrated systems for data centers.

The $33.7 billion ​company did not ‌disclose financial information for the unit to ⁠be spun ​off, including its revenue, profit margins or debt allocation, nor did it specify the stake it would retain ⁠in the new company.

Flex, excluding SpinCo, ​said it is expected to be positioned for low-to-mid-single-digit growth, it said in a press release.

Flex said ⁠Chief Executive Revathi Advaithi will lead SpinCo after the separation, while President Michael Hartung will become CEO of the remaining Flex.

The spin-off is expected to ​be tax-free to shareholders and is ⁠targeted to close in the first quarter of ​calendar 2027, subject to market ‌conditions.

Citi, PJT Partners and BofA ​Securities are serving as financial advisers to Flex.

(Reporting by Sabrina Valle; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama )

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

OpenAI creates new unit with $4 billion investment to aid corporate AI push
Shein accuses Temu of 'industrial scale' copyright breaches in UK legal battle
Alphabet considers first yen bond sale to fund AI goals
EU Commission in talks with OpenAI and Anthropic over AI models
Circle sees revenue boost as stablecoin demand rises amid volatility; shares up
AI labs should pass safety review to get US government contracts, group says
Disneyland rolls out facial recognition at US park's entrances
US prepares AI security order that omits mandatory model tests
Google settles racial discrimination lawsuit for US$50mil
Who are you getting your health advice from?

Others Also Read