Produced: April 26, 2026 | Register D
Produced: April 26, 2026 | Register D
Delta Electronics makes power. Specifically, it converts electricity into the precise voltages that keep industrial machines, automobiles, buildings, and — increasingly — AI servers running. Founded in Taipei in 1971 to produce TV deflection coils, it has compounded into a TWD 5.4 trillion (~US$166B) market cap business by staying relentlessly focused on power conversion efficiency and thermal control. The AI infrastructure boom turbocharged the story: Delta holds an estimated 60% share of the AI server power supply market, and its 800V HVDC rack shelves co-developed with NVIDIA achieve >98% conversion efficiency at 1.1 MW per rack.
Full legal name: Delta Electronics, Inc. Ticker: 2308 / TWSE GICS: Information Technology / Electronic Equipment, Instruments & Components Headquarters: 186 Ruey Kuang Road, Neihu District, Taipei (business); 131 Xingbang Road, Guishan District, Taoyuan (operations) Founded: April 4, 1971 Employees: ~83,000 Website: deltaww.com IR page: Delta IR Latest investor presentation: No standalone investor day deck identified as of April 2026. See IR page for quarterly earnings materials.
| Segment | Revenue (TWD B) | % of Total | YoY Growth | What it does |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Power Electronics (PEB) | 280.0 | 50.5% | +25% | PSUs, AC-DC converters, fans, thermal modules for servers, telecom, industrial |
| Infrastructure (IFB) | 182.0 | 32.8% | +82% | AI data center power systems (HVDC racks, UPS, liquid cooling), energy storage, BMS |
| Automation (AUB) | 54.9 | 9.9% | +5% | Industrial automation, CNC drives, motion control, building automation |
| Mobility / EV (EVB) | 37.0 | 6.7% | -16% | EV chargers, on-board chargers, battery management |
| Other | 0.9 | 0.2% | flat |
Infrastructure is the breakout segment: EBIT grew +413% in FY2025 as AI data center power demand compounded on high-margin system contracts.
Manufacturing-heavy OEM/ODM model. Revenue is largely one-time capital purchases by data center operators, though service/maintenance contracts are growing. Gross margins expanded from 29% (FY2023) to 34% (FY2025) as high-value AI power systems grew as a share of mix. EBIT margin went from 10% to 15% over the same period. Operating leverage is real and accelerating.
~70% international, ~30% Taiwan/China domestic (inferred from customer base; not formally disclosed). Americas (US hyperscalers) is the fastest-growing region. US Plano, Texas facility expanding to 1.5 msf by 2031 signals increasing Americas manufacturing exposure.
Taiwan (HQ + manufacturing): - Taipei HQ (Neihu) + Taoyuan operations center - Taoyuan Plants 1, 2, 5; R&D Center - Chungli Plants 1, 3, 5, 6; Pingjhen Plant - Tainan Plants 1 & 2; Taichung Branch
China (largest manufacturing base): - Dongguan Plants 1-8 (Guangdong Province) - Wujiang Plants 1-5 (Jiangsu Province) - Chenzhou Plant; Shanghai regional HQ; Hong Kong Office
Americas: - Plano, Texas: 435,000 sqft advanced R&D + manufacturing; expanding to ~1.5 msf by 2031
Thailand: - Bangpoo Automotive Plant; Bangpoo Power Supply Plant; Wellgrow Plant - Three new factories came online end-2025; Thailand targeted as second manufacturing HQ
Other: Japan (Tokyo + regional offices), Korea (Seoul), Singapore, Vietnam (Hanoi), India (Gurgaon, Bangalore, Rudrapur, Krishnagiri, Chennai), Germany, Netherlands, Sweden (European sales/R&D)
~200 total facilities globally across manufacturing, R&D, and sales.
Asset-heavy dynamics: Capital-intensive manufacturing with escalating capex (TWD 46B in FY2025; ~TWD 40B guided for FY2026). The heavy footprint is a moat — replicating it takes a decade — but it also creates China geopolitical concentration risk (see Section 8).
| # | Customer | Ticker | Est. Revenue Share | Relationship Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hyperscalers (Microsoft, Google, Meta, Amazon) | MSFT / GOOG / META / AMZN | ~30%+ combined (undisclosed individually) | AI server OEM / ODM |
| 2 | Apple | AAPL | Undisclosed | PSU / power component OEM |
| 3 | Tesla | TSLA | Undisclosed | EV charger / on-board charger OEM |
| 4 | AI server OEMs (Supermicro, Quanta, Wistron) | SMCI / private | Undisclosed | Power supply ODM |
Concentration risk: No single customer formally disclosed >10% of revenue. AI server power (>20% of total revenue) is concentrated in 3-4 hyperscalers. Hyperscaler capex cycle is therefore a material swing factor for Delta’s Infrastructure segment. EV concentration in Tesla also creates some mobility segment dependency, though EVB is now <7% of revenue.
Key partnerships: - NVIDIA: co-development on HVDC platforms (see above) - Apple and Tesla: long-standing OEM relationships
Dependency flags: AI server concentration is simultaneously the growth thesis and the primary risk. The Mobility segment EV headwinds are already visible (-16% in FY2025) — illustrating how quickly a once-important customer cluster can become a headwind.
Why it matters: AI servers consume 5-10x more power per rack than conventional servers. NVIDIA’s GB200 NVL72 rack draws ~120 kW vs ~10-20 kW for a standard rack. Delta is one of the only companies globally that can engineer and deliver power systems at this scale — from 20,000V grid access to 0.8V at the chip. It is also the only major Taiwan supplier offering fully integrated power and thermal management under one roof.
End-use applications: - AI/HPC data centers (primary growth driver) - Industrial automation and factory controls - EV infrastructure and on-board charging - Commercial building management and HVAC - Telecom and network infrastructure - Renewable energy and grid storage
TAM: - AI server PSU market: ~$2B (2024) → ~$8-12B by 2032 at ~25%+ CAGR (industry estimates) - Broader data center power and cooling: $50B+ TAM by 2030 - Industrial automation and EV charging add further significant surface area
Market share: ~60% of AI server power supply market (widely cited; not formally disclosed by Delta)
Secular tailwinds: 1. AI infrastructure buildout — hyperscaler capex accelerating; no sign of slowdown as of Q1 2026 2. Power density increase per AI rack (GB200 → Vera Rubin → next-gen) 3. Data center energy efficiency mandates (efficiency improvements = Delta’s advantage) 4. EV ecosystem build-out (near-term soft, but structural long-term) 5. Supply chain reshoring — US and Thailand manufacturing position Delta favorably
| Name | Title | Tenure | Background |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ping Cheng | Chairman & CEO | CEO since 2012; Chairman since 2024 | Joined Delta 1988; ran global manufacturing in China and Thailand 1996-2008; SVP Power Supply Business 2008; first Chief Brand Officer 2010; the architect of Delta’s solutions-provider transformation |
| Mark Ko | Vice Chairman | N/A | Details not publicly disclosed |
| Simon Chang | President & COO | Joined 1981 | 40+ year tenure; operational continuity anchor |
| Victor Cheng | Board Member; CEO, Delta Thailand PCL | N/A | Leads Thai subsidiary (listed separately as DELTA.TH) |
| Shan-Shan Guo | Board Member; Chief Brand Officer; Vice Chairman, Delta Foundation | N/A | Leads brand and ESG/foundation |
| Johnson Lee | EVP, Infrastructure Business | N/A | Leads fastest-growing segment (IFB, +82% FY2025) |
| Ted Shyy | EVP, Power Electronics Business | N/A | Leads largest segment (PEB, 50% of revenue) |
| James Tang | EVP, Mobility Business | N/A | Leads EV/transport segment |
| Jimmy Yiin | EVP, Global Business Operations | N/A | Commercial/go-to-market |
| Rock Huang | EVP, Global Manufacturing | N/A | Manufacturing and supply chain |
Founder: Bruce C.H. Cheng — Honorary Chairman. Stepped down from executive role 2012 after 41 years. Transition to Ping Cheng was smooth; no business disruption.
Full independent director composition not published in available English sources. Taiwan law requires at least one-third independent directors on large-cap boards. Average board tenure ~6.5 years.
| Competitor | Ticker | Overlap | Differentiator vs Delta |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lite-On Technology | 2301.TW | Direct PSU, server power | Smaller, less AI-specific depth |
| Vertiv Holdings | VRT | Data center power/cooling | More software/service-oriented; higher US exposure |
| Advanced Energy | AEIS | Precision power, data center | Stronger in semiconductor equipment power |
| FSP Group | 3015.TW | PSU manufacturing | Consumer/commercial focused; smaller scale |
| Chicony Power | 6412.TW | Power adapters, PSU | Primarily consumer/laptop chargers |
Delta’s moat: - 60% AI PSU market share — near-monopoly in the segment that matters most right now - Only company offering integrated power delivery from 20kV grid to 0.8V chip - Long-term OEM qualification with Apple, Tesla, hyperscalers (sticky, multi-year) - ~200 facilities globally; no PSU competitor matches this manufacturing scale - Co-development IP with NVIDIA on HVDC platforms
All in TWD millions. USD at ~32 TWD/USD.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Market cap | TWD 5,390B (~US$168B) |
| Enterprise value | ~TWD 5,313B (net cash position ~TWD 77B) |
| P/E (TTM) | 89.9x |
| Forward P/E | 54.6x |
| EV/EBITDA | Not available from public sources |
| FCF yield | ~1.0% |
| Dividend yield | 0.56% (TWD 11.60/share) |
| 52-week range | TWD 324.50 – TWD 2,115.00 |
Stock has appreciated ~530% over 12 months. Premium valuation requires sustained execution.
| Metric | FY2022 | FY2023 | FY2024 | FY2025 | FY2026E |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue (TWD M) | 384,443 | 401,227 | 421,148 | 554,885 | ~720,000+ (est.) |
| Revenue growth | +22.2% | +4.4% | +5.0% | +31.8% | +30%+ (mgmt guide + Q1 +34%) |
| Gross profit (TWD M) | 110,773 | 117,213 | 136,580 | 190,157 | N/A |
| Gross margin % | 28.8% | 29.2% | 32.4% | 34.3% | ~34-35%E |
| EBIT (TWD M) | 41,439 | 40,942 | 47,734 | 84,042 | N/A |
| EBIT margin % | 10.8% | 10.2% | 11.3% | 15.2% | ~15-16%E |
| Net income (TWD M) | 32,666 | 33,393 | 35,229 | 60,108 | N/A |
| Net margin % | 8.5% | 8.3% | 8.4% | 10.8% | ~10-11%E |
| EPS (basic, TWD) | 12.58 | 12.86 | 13.56 | 23.14 | ~30+E (forward PE 54.6x) |
FY2026E based on management guidance (double-digit growth), Q1 2026 actual (+34% YoY), and analyst consensus direction. Full consensus EPS not verified.
| Metric | FY2022 | FY2023 | FY2024 | FY2025 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Operating cash flow (TWD M) | 46,529 | 71,086 | 72,895 | 98,474 |
| Capex (TWD M) | -21,824 | -27,830 | -33,485 | -46,091 |
| Free cash flow (TWD M) | 24,705 | 43,257 | 39,410 | 52,383 |
| FCF margin % | 6.4% | 10.8% | 9.4% | 9.4% |
| Net cash (TWD M) | 13,293 | 31,078 | 54,006 | 77,091 |
| Net debt / EBITDA | Net cash | Net cash | Net cash | Net cash |
| ROIC | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Balance sheet is pristine. Net cash TWD 77B (~US$2.4B) and growing. Capex escalating to fund capacity expansion (TWD 46B FY2025; ~TWD 40B guided FY2026) but FCF still positive. No dilution risk.
Today: Infrastructure segment — AI data center power systems. +82% revenue, +413% EBIT in FY2025. Not a cyclical bounce; structural mix shift as power density per rack keeps climbing with each NVIDIA generation.
Pipeline: 1. NVIDIA Vera Rubin platform (late 2026): Delta management flagged Q3 2026 as a generational product cycle. Higher per-rack power requirements = more Delta content per unit. 2. Liquid cooling scale-up: ~9% of FY2025 revenue; growth expected to accelerate as CDU/direct-liquid-cooling adoption rises with GB200 and Vera Rubin racks 3. US manufacturing buildout: Plano, Texas to 1.5 msf by 2031; reduces tariff exposure, captures reshored demand 4. Thailand as second manufacturing HQ: Three factories operational end-2025; geopolitical diversification away from China 5. India expansion: Multiple sites; India AI data center build is an emerging growth surface 6. Industrial automation recovery: AUB +5% FY2025; could accelerate as global manufacturing capital spending picks up
R&D: Not formally disclosed as % of revenue. Operating expense guidance indicates R&D investment increasing. NVIDIA GTC co-development and HVDC platform work suggest significant R&D intensity.
M&A: Universal Instruments (2021, $89M) is the most recent deal. No significant M&A activity since; management focus is organic growth and capex deployment.
No specific named contract disclosures. Revenue is driven by ongoing OEM/ODM relationships with hyperscalers rather than single government or offtake contracts. NVIDIA co-development is the most strategically significant relationship but is not a formal long-term contract per public disclosure.
| Risk | Likelihood | Existing Mitigants | Mgmt De-risk Plan | Can It Be Closed? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AI capex cycle slowdown | Medium — hyperscaler capex strong through 2026 but can reverse quickly | Diversified across Apple, Tesla, industrial, building segments | Continue diversification into automation, EV, building BMS | No — structural; manage through diversification |
| China manufacturing concentration | High — 15+ plants in Dongguan and Wujiang | Thailand, India, US facilities growing | Thailand as second HQ; multi-country capex plan; US Plano expansion | Partial — 3-5 year transition; cannot fully exit China |
| Hyperscaler customer concentration | Medium — AI PSU >20% revenue with 3-4 dominant buyers | Broad hyperscaler base (no single >20%) | Deepening product integration into NVIDIA platform; adding automation revenue | Partial — inherent to market leadership |
| EV segment headwinds | High near-term — EVB declined 16% FY2025 | Only 6.7% of total revenue; limited P&L impact | R&D continues on next-gen charger tech; position for EV recovery | Cyclical — recovers with EV market; outside Delta’s control |
| Valuation risk | High — 89.9x TTM P/E; consensus already behind the move | Strong FCF and net cash; execution track record excellent | Consistent delivery on guidance | No — market-driven; requires earnings growth to grow into multiple |
No dilution risk. Delta is FCF-generative, net-cash, and has no history of equity dilution. FCF of TWD 52.4B comfortably covers capex and dividends.
Moderate. Ping Cheng has led Delta’s transformation since 2012 — the AI infrastructure pivot is his strategic direction. Simon Chang (COO, 40+ year tenure) provides operational resilience. The Bruce Cheng → Ping Cheng succession in 2012 was clean; institutional capability is evident. No succession plan publicly disclosed for Ping Cheng.
Q4 2025 results (reported February 26, 2026): - Revenue: TWD 161.6B (+42% YoY, +8% QoQ) — record quarter - EPS: TWD 6.67 (vs TWD 2.76 a year prior; vs TWD 7.16 prior quarter) - Gross margin: 34.6%; operating margin: 16.3% - FY2025: revenue TWD 554.9B (+32%); net income TWD 60.1B (+71%); EPS TWD 23.14 - Liquid cooling: ~9% of FY2025 annual revenue
Q1 2026 revenue (monthly data reported, full P&L due April 30, 2026): - Q1 2026 revenue: TWD 159.4B (+34% YoY) — record Q1 - March 2026: TWD 59.8B single-month record (+37.6% YoY) - Segment mix (March): Power & components 53%, Infrastructure 33%, Automation 9%, Transportation 5% - Management: “Q1 seasonal slowdown milder because AI data center power products now a growing share of sales” - Q2 2026: expected significant increase in AI power shipments - Q3 2026: generational product cycle aligned with NVIDIA Vera Rubin platform
Next earnings date: April 30, 2026 (Q1 2026 full results)
Other: - Taiwan Ratings affirmed ‘twAA/twA-1+’ (2025/2026) - Delta stock hit third-largest in Taiwan by market cap during 2025 surge - New Thai factories (3) operational end-2025 - US Plano facility expansion plans confirmed
| Holder | Type | Who They Are | % of Outstanding | Filing Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bruce Cheng family | Founding family | Founder of Delta (1971); Honorary Chairman; long-term significant holder | Est. low single digits (precision requires TWSE access) | TWSE filings |
| Delta Electronics Foundation | Corporate/foundation | Delta’s own charitable foundation — possible legacy shares | Not quantified | |
| Foreign institutional (aggregate) | Institutional | Broad index and active funds; estimate ~30-40% aggregate for TWSE large-cap | ~30-40% est. | TWSE aggregate data |
| Stanley-Laman Group | US institutional | Small registered US holder (SEC 13F) | <0.01% | SEC 13F |
| Boston Common AM | US institutional (ESG) | ESG-focused investment manager; closed position January 2026 | 0% | SEC 13F |
Data quality caveat: US SEC 13F data is not meaningful for Taiwan stocks — the vast majority of Delta shareholders are not US-domiciled. Precise institutional ownership requires TWSE filings and shareholder registry access, which are not available through standard US research tools.
| Item | Status |
|---|---|
| Financial data source | StockAnalysis.com (TWSE filings); FY = calendar year ending December 31 |
| Geographic revenue | Not formally disclosed; inferred from customer base |
| EV/EBITDA | Not calculable from available screener data |
| ROIC | Not calculable without net operating asset detail |
| Insider ownership | Requires TWSE registry; SEC 13F incomplete for Taiwan stocks |
| S&P rating | ‘BBB+’ / Stable (confirmed via S&P search; see also Taiwan Ratings ‘twAA/twA-1+’) |
| Q1 2026 | Monthly revenue confirmed; full P&L due April 30, 2026 |
| Investor presentation | No standalone deck found; IR page links to earnings materials |
Profile completed: April 26, 2026. Sources: StockAnalysis.com, Alpha Spread, TVBS World Taiwan, Taipei Times, Delta IR website, Wikipedia, PRNewswire, Perplexity Finance.