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TechWire Asia

AI Appreciation Day 2026 puts trust and governance in focus NVIDIA pours its full stack into Japan. The flip side of its China lockout? Malaysia's digital regulations are becoming a real cost for its startups Malaysia's AI data center vision: How EdgeConneX is building for the future Southeast Asia tech funding doubled to $7.4 billion. One company took most of it SK Hynix's Nasdaq listing raises $26.5 billion to fund Korea's AI memory expansion OpenAI launches GPT-5.6 for coding, cyber and science Meta rolls out Muse Image AI model for Instagram, WhatsApp, and advertisers Malaysia businesses face AI and password cybersecurity risks How AI workloads will test APAC mobile networks Enterprise AI costs don't have to spiral, argues ManageEngine Microsoft launches $2.5B Frontier Company for enterprise AI FIFA World Cup: How To Win Fans in APAC With Technology Kanga enters a new phase of global growth and launches Kanga Global Vertiv ramps up manufacturing in Johor's tightening data centre market U Mobile completes migration to own ULTRA5G network after DNB exit Anthropic Claude models launch in Microsoft Foundry on Azure Asia built the AI infrastructure boom. The BIS just flagged who's exposed if it stalls. Why Apple is lobbying Washington to buy China’s memory chips Nvidia-backed Firmus plans 170,000-GPU Batam AI data centre Taiwan robot makers march into humanoid systems IBM claims world’s first sub-1 nm chip technology using nanostack design Can Alibaba bridge Malaysia’s SME talent gap via agentic AI for business? Huawei’s new tech explains why mobile AI network tech is no longer optional Apple-Intel chip deal faces years-long production timeline China beats US in TOP500 ranking with world’s fastest supercomputer The global memory squeeze hits the Mainland China PC market, leading to a decline IBM joins OpenAI cyber program for vulnerability detection Is the Shopee ChatGPT integration the blueprint for the future of Southeast Asian e-commerce? How the global AI boom dropped a record RM1.127 trillion trade windfall on Malaysia Philippines expands Google Cloud public sector AI partnership South Korea takes a positive spin on AI Apple's price hikes trace the memory chip shortage straight back to Asia Why enterprises need clearer accountability for AI agents Google sues Chinese network over AI text phishing scams AI Won't Fix Broken Personalisation: Braze Report Reveals How Media and Entertainment Can Drive Real Success Across APAC Anthropic builds out Claude as OpenAI and Google stay ahead How APAC firms are handling software supply chain security Meta Business Agent turns WhatsApp into a salesperson, and Southeast Asia will decide if it works CrowdStrike: Chinese hackers lead tech sector espionage threats NVIDIA deals in South Korea cover AI memory, cloud and robotics Alibaba Cloud's Johor region launch comes packaged with an agentic AI push in Malaysia Digital Realty Malaysia is open and already looking beyond Cyberjaya AI’s invisible metal: Why tin demand is surging, and supplies are running thin WeChat is opening up to AI agents, and Southeast Asia’s super apps should be nervous TNG eWallet is eyeing agentic payments and its CEO sees Malaysia’s regulatory climate as encouraging AI data centres could double power and water use by 2030 TNG eWallet is no longer just a payment app, and the numbers prove it Nvidia GTC Taipei recap: RTX Spark, Vera, data centres and more Alipay wants AI agents to handle your payments. But who’s really in control? Huawei’s Her’s Law eyes AI chips as China reduces Nvidia reliance Kong Konnect now available in Singapore AWS is quietly building one of Southeast Asia’s most ambitious green data centre footprints China launches offshore wind-powered underwater AI data centre Has Huawei just rewritten the rules of chip design? OpenAI Daybreak and the patching cycle AirTrunk to invest MYR12 billion in Johor data centres China orders Meta to unwind Manus AI acquisition Kong reveals ‘agent-to-agent communication’ critical for Asian enterprises Huawei picked Malaysia for its biggest AI move outside China. Anwar told you exactly why. DeepSeek launches V4 model adapted for Huawei AI chips MATCH Act passes first hurdle–targeting semiconductor tools, not just chips The real cost of AI in APAC isn’t the software licence–it’s the mess underneath Cisco shows Universal Quantum Switch prototype to connect quantum systems The global smartphone market just had its worst quarter in two years, and memory is to blame Google Cloud introduces AI agent platform and new TPU chips at Next 2026 Tesla plans to use Intel 14A chips for Terafab project Meta deploys tracking tool to train AI on employee workflows Tuned Global’s service manipulation detector for streaming clients and rights holders Malaysia is rushing into AI faster than anyone. Its governance gap is the price Apple’s CEO transition puts a hardware engineer in charge–at exactly the right moment Memory shortage to persist through 2027 as supply lags demand xAI provides GPU infrastructure to Cursor for AI model training Amazon Leo just gave Southeast Asia’s satellite internet market a second player Meta extends Broadcom deal to develop AI chips Can Malaysia Build a USD1 Trillion Economy on the Strength of Its Geography? How will MyDigital ID progress in Malaysia? Southeast Asia leads the world in AI optimism. Its governance frameworks are nowhere near ready. A chatbot is not an AI strategy Japan is building physical AI it controls–and its biggest companies are all in India is leading Asia’s agentic AI adoption race. The rest of the region is still catching up. Ericsson frames 6G as an intelligent fabric Mandatory AI literacy: China joins the UAE and India. Where is Southeast Asia? Minor Hotels builds data and AI platform with Google Cloud The MATCH Act would cut off China’s last chipmaking lifeline–Asia is already feeling it Amperity expands to Australian AWS Regions and invests in local talent Chinese memory giants are scaling fast, and the AI boom is giving them cover Intel joins Musk’s Terafab AI chip project with Tesla and SpaceX TikTok’s second data centre in Finland a European push Custom AI chips, 3.5 gigawatts, and a quiet SEC clause: the Broadcom deal explained Kong names Bruce Felt as chief financial officer DeepSeek V4 points to growing use of Huawei chips in AI models Microsoft to invest $10 billion in Japan for AI and cybersecurity Which CRMs offer the most powerful reporting tools?
AWS AI revenue hits US$15 billion. Andy Jassy says the hard part is keeping up with demand
Dashveenjit Kaur · 2026-04-10 · via TechWire Asia
  • AWS AI revenue tops US$15 billion in Q1 2026, presents real returns.
  • Amazon’s custom chip business doubles to US$20bn.
  • Capacity constraints mean demand is still outrunning supply

For the better part of two years, the loudest criticism of AI investment has been the same: show me the revenue. Amazon CEO Andy Jassy had a straightforward answer this week. In his annual shareholder letter, he put AWS AI revenue at over US$15 billion in Q1 2026, noting it is “ascending rapidly,” and drawing a pointed comparison to AWS’s own early days, when the cloud business had a US$58 million revenue run rate three years after launch.

Three years into the AI wave, that figure is 260 times larger. The disclosure helped alleviate some investor concerns about the billions Amazon is deploying into AI-related initiatives. Following the release of the letter, Amazon shares rose 2% in pre-market trading.

The numbers landed at a moment when markets have been pressing hyperscalers hard on whether AI infrastructure spending will produce durable returns or simply represent the largest capital mis-allocation in tech history.

Jassy’s response to that was direct. “We’re not investing approximately US$200 billion in CAPEX in 2026 on a hunch,” he wrote.

The chip business nobody saw coming

The AWS AI revenue figure is significant. These custom chip numbers are arguably more so. Amazon’s chips business, which includes Graviton processors, Trainium AI chips and Nitro networking cards, now has an annualised revenue run rate of over US$20 billion, doubling from the US$10 billion disclosed with fourth-quarter results.

Jassy drew a direct line between this trajectory and what happened in CPU compute. Graviton, which offers up to 40% better price-performance than x86 processors, is now used by 98% of the top 1,000 EC2 customers. Trainium2 had about 30% better price-performance than comparable GPUs and has largely sold out. Trainium3, which started shipping at the start of 2026, is 30 to 40% more price-performant than Trainium2 and is nearly fully subscribed.

The demand picture is striking enough that two large AWS customers asked whether they could buy all of its custom Graviton capacity for 2026. Amazon declined – it still needs to provide CPU capacity to other customers – but Jassy cited it as a signal of where appetite sits.

Jassy also raised the prospect of selling chips externally. “There’s so much demand for our chips that it’s quite possible we’ll sell racks of them to third parties in the future,” he said. That would put Amazon in direct competition with Nvidia and AMD in a segment the company has so far only served internally.

What this means for the Asia Pacific

The AWS AI revenue milestone does not exist in isolation for the region. AWS has committed SG$12 billion, approximately US$9 billion, to Singapore between 2024 and 2028. Across Southeast Asia, Malaysia is gaining traction not only as an offshoot of Singapore but increasingly for local workloads as the government digitises the economy, while Indonesia’s cloud computing market has been growing at a CAGR of 48% over the last five years.

That regional build-out sits inside a broader constraint that Jassy acknowledged plainly. AI revenue “could be growing even faster,” but for capacity constraints currently facing the tech industry. AWS added 3.9 gigawatts of new power capacity in 2025 and plans to double total power capacity by the end of 2027.

Access to grid power remains the biggest constraint in the Asia Pacific, a challenge set to intensify in 2026 as data centre workloads change to more intensive AI-driven demand. For enterprises in the region building AI workloads on AWS, that capacity ceiling is not an abstract concern – it shapes availability, pricing and lead times on the services they are planning around.

The CAPEX argument

Amazon reiterated its plans to spend roughly US$200 billion in capital expenditure in 2026, with much of it expected to be monetised in 2027 and 2028, and already supported by customer commitments, including more than $100 billion from OpenAI.

The AI investment cycle has produced genuine scepticism among analysts and investors about whether the returns will match the spending. Brian Mulberry, chief market strategist at Zacks Investment Management, said: “The AI run-rate is a strong validation that AWS is successfully turning the AI boom into real, high-growth revenue. It’s still early days per Jassy, but the momentum positions AWS as a leader in AI infrastructure.”

Whether other hyperscalers can point to comparable proof points when they report will determine how long that scepticism lingers. For now, Amazon has put a number on what the AI time looks like as a revenue line. The rest of the industry is being asked to follow.

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