Infineon finds itself navigating two starkly different currents this summer. On one side, the chipmaker is charging ahead with a €5 billion megafactory in Dresden, set to open on July 2 — three months ahead of schedule — to feed surging demand for power semiconductors in AI data centers. On the other, a Chinese court has slammed the door on its gallium-nitride (GaN) business in the world’s largest semiconductor market.
China’s Supreme People’s Court confirmed a sales ban on Infineon’s GaN products across the mainland, delivering a blow to the company’s growth ambitions in a critical region. The ruling, dated June 14, 2026, stems from a patent dispute with domestic rival Innoscience. Infineon now faces an enforced strategic pivot: it must either appeal the decision or restructure its GaN operations in China, a process that will unfold in the coming weeks.
A Fab Built for the AI Boom
The timing of the Dresden opening could hardly be more telling. Production chief Alexander Gorski highlighted that customer orders for power semiconductors used in AI data centers are outstripping what Infineon can currently deliver. The new “Smart Power Fab” will double production capacity at the site and is designed to become Europe’s largest facility for intelligent power chips. Roughly €1 billion of the investment comes from the European Chips Act.
Infineon supplies the power-management components that keep AI server racks running — a less flashy but essential slice of the AI infrastructure puzzle. Gorski pointed to the growing adoption of AI in both consumer and enterprise applications, alongside the structural tailwinds of decarbonization and digitalization, as reasons for his confidence. Goldman Sachs projects global AI infrastructure investment will exceed $700 billion in 2026 and could reach between $920 billion and $1.4 trillion by 2027.
Raised Guidance Reflects Momentum
The company’s upgraded full-year forecast underscores the strength of that demand. For fiscal 2026, Infineon now expects revenue to climb markedly, a sharp upgrade from its earlier projection of only moderate growth. The segment result margin is targeted at around 20%, and adjusted free cash flow is seen at approximately €1.65 billion.
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Third-quarter revenue guidance stands at roughly €4.1 billion, following a second quarter that delivered €3.812 billion in sales and a segment margin of 17.1%.
The broader industry backdrop is also brightening. Bank of America upgraded Intel from “Underperform” to “Buy” on June 11 with a $135 price target. STMicroelectronics received a similar boost on June 10, with a “Buy” rating and a €86 target.
Stock Shows the Strain of Two Narratives
Infineon shares closed the week at €79.66, a modest 0.39% gain on the day but up roughly 108% since the start of the year. That puts the stock about 11% below its 52-week high of €89.67 hit in early June.
The relative strength index stands at 59.7, suggesting no extreme overbought conditions, but the annualized 30-day volatility of nearly 75% signals that the stock can swing sharply on fresh news. The market has clearly priced in the AI growth story — the stock trades about 28% above its 50-day moving average.
Yet the GaN ban adds a layer of risk that investors must weigh against the catalytic potential of the Dresden fab. If hyperscalers confirm their order volumes and AI demand holds, Infineon’s capacity expansion arrives at exactly the right moment. Any doubts about the pace of AI buildout, however, could rapidly unwind the premium built into the share price. The July 2 opening will be the next concrete test of that balance.
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