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Home » Corning’s AI & DCI Push Targets Multi-Billion-Dollar Fiber Expansion

Corning’s AI & DCI Push Targets Multi-Billion-Dollar Fiber Expansion

August 8, 2025
in Optical
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Corning is accelerating into its next growth phase with a clear focus on two high-value opportunities: AI-driven data center networking and next-generation Data Center Interconnect (DCI). Both markets are undergoing architectural shifts that could multiply fiber demand over the next several years—and Corning is positioning itself as a primary technology supplier.

In Q2 2025, Corning’s Optical Communications segment posted $1.57B in sales, up 41% year-over-year. Enterprise network revenue surged 81% on the “scale-out” of GPU clusters inside hyperscale data centers, where more AI nodes are being linked via fiber. But CEO Wendell Weeks says the bigger play is the “scale-up” of AI nodes—from under 100 GPUs today to hundreds per node—spanning multiple racks. This shift pushes link lengths to the “electrical-to-optical frontier,” where fiber becomes more cost-effective than copper. One current-generation AI node, such as Nvidia’s Blackwell architecture, can require more than 1,200 links and over two miles (3.2 km) of copper. In the scale-up model, those copper runs are replaced—and lengthened—with optical links, creating a 2–3x larger market than Corning’s existing $2B enterprise fiber business. The company is already working with partners including Broadcom and Nvidia on co-packaged optics (CPO) platforms to capture this demand.

The second major thrust is in DCI, where rising AI workloads are stressing long-haul and metro fiber routes between cities and data center campuses. Corning has commercialized a new high-density fiber and cable system that can fit two to four times as many fibers into an existing conduit—critical for operators that want to upgrade without trenching new paths. The company adapted design principles from its data center connectivity portfolio to the harsher outdoor environment, allowing higher fiber counts without increasing cable diameter. Lumen Technologies, one of the first adopters, has reserved 10% of Corning’s global fiber capacity for 2025–2026 to support AI-focused interconnect builds. Two other unnamed Tier 1 operators have signed on, and Corning expects the DCI portfolio to generate $1B in annual sales by the end of the decade.

Corning’s execution is being guided by its “Springboard” plan, launched in late 2023 to add $6B in incremental annualized sales by 2026. The company has already booked $3.1B toward that goal, expanded operating margins to 19%, and invested heavily in U.S.-based manufacturing. Negotiations are underway with multiple major customers—both existing and new—to secure long-term domestic production agreements across its 34 advanced manufacturing facilities in 15 states. “We’re seeing remarkable customer response to both our new GenAI and U.S.-made solar products,” Weeks said. “We also expect an additional growth driver to emerge in the coming months as customers leverage our large U.S. footprint.”

• Q2 2025 core sales: $4.05B, up 12% YoY; core EPS: $0.60, up 28% YoY

• Optical Communications: $1.57B sales, +41% YoY; enterprise sales +81% YoY

• DCI products double sales from Q1 to Q2; Lumen reserves 10% of global fiber output

• CPO collaborations with Broadcom and Nvidia target 2–3x current AI fiber market

• Carrier network sales +16% YoY as inventory drawdowns end and fiber expansion resumes

“We’re experiencing strong growth drivers that increase our confidence in maintaining our momentum to 2026 and beyond,” said Weeks.

From Corning’s Q2 Investor Presentation – https://s203.q4cdn.com/212458750/files/doc_financials/2025/q2/2025-07-29-Second-Quarter-Earnings-Call-Presentation.pdf

🌐 Why it Matters: AI workloads are forcing a rethink of both in-rack and inter-campus connectivity, with fiber poised to displace copper deep inside the server cluster and to expand capacity between AI campuses. Corning’s technology roadmap—from bespoke CPO-enabled transceiver connectivity to ruggedized, ultra-dense DCI cabling—puts it squarely in the path of these capital flows. Operators get more capacity without new conduit builds, while hyperscalers prepare for AI architectures that will demand unprecedented bandwidth and low latency.

Corning Total Core Sales – Last 4 Quarters

QuarterCore Sales ($M)YoY Growth (%)QoQ Growth (%)
Q2 20254,0451210
Q1 20253,67910-5
Q4 20243,874184
Q3 20243,73384

Optical Communications Sales – Last 4 Quarters

QuarterOptical Comm. Sales ($M)YoY Growth (%)QoQ Growth (%)
Q2 20251,5664116
Q1 20251,35534-1
Q4 20241,3685110
Q3 20241,246——

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