AI Data Center Build

AI Data Center Build

4 entries in Corporate Counsel Tracker

Nokia Raises 2026 Network Infrastructure Sales Outlook to 12-14% on AI Demand

Nokia reported first-quarter 2026 results on April 23 showing 12% year-over-year growth in network infrastructure sales, driven by €1 billion in orders from AI and cloud customers in the Americas. Optical Networks revenue grew 20%, while overall comparable net sales rose 4% to €4.5 billion and operating profit jumped 54% to €281 million, beating analyst estimates. CEO Justin Hotard and Network Infrastructure head David Heard upgraded the full-year 2026 forecast for the division from 6-8% growth to 12-14%, with Optical and IP Networks combined now expected to grow 18-20%.

At David Sacks’s Behest, White House Barrels Forward on Industry-Friendly AI Policy

Core Event: On March 20, 2026, the Trump Administration released the “National Policy Framework for Artificial Intelligence,” a legislative blueprint calling on Congress to enact a unified federal AI standard that preempts burdensome state laws, as directed by Executive Order 14365 signed by President Trump on December 11, 2025.[6][8] This industry-friendly push, influenced by David Sacks, emphasizes deregulation to accelerate AI innovation, infrastructure like data centers, and U.S. dominance over China, while carving out exceptions for state powers on child safety, fraud, consumer protection, and zoning.[6][7]

Jane Street Invests $1B in CoreWeave, Signs $6B AI Cloud Deal[1][2]

Jane Street, the quantitative trading firm, committed $6 billion to CoreWeave's AI cloud platform and purchased $1 billion in CoreWeave Class A common stock at $109 per share. The deal grants Jane Street access to next-generation compute infrastructure across multiple facilities, including NVIDIA's Vera Rubin technology, along with integrated software, dedicated connectivity, custom storage, and technical support for its AI research operations.

SK Hynix Q1 2026 Profit Jumps 5x on AI Memory Chip Demand Surge

SK Hynix reported record operating profit for the first quarter of 2026, with earnings surging more than fivefold and revenue climbing 198 percent to 52.6 trillion won. The South Korean memory chip maker attributed the surge to explosive demand for high-bandwidth memory chips that has outpaced production capacity. Nvidia remains the primary customer, driving orders for AI data center infrastructure. SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won warned that wafer shortages will persist through 2030, even as the company plans aggressive capacity increases, including an eightfold expansion of DRAM production this year and a $13 billion investment in AI memory. Competitors Samsung and Micron are similarly reallocating manufacturing capacity toward AI products.

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