Flex Ltd., the $24 billion Singapore-domiciled contract manufacturer, disclosed plans to separate its Cloud and Power Infrastructure segment into an independent publicly traded entity, effective within twelve months. The unit generated $3.8 billion in trailing revenue and serves hyperscale data center operators building out GPU clusters and liquid-cooled server racks. The spinoff isolates high-margin infrastructure assembly from Flex's legacy automotive and consumer electronics divisions, which carry thinner spreads and cyclical exposure.
The segment designs and manufactures power distribution units, rack-level cooling systems, and modular data center components for Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud. Flex has not named the new entity or disclosed whether it will retain an equity stake post-separation. The company stated the spinoff will be tax-free to U.S. shareholders and structured as a pro-rata distribution, with existing Flex shareholders receiving shares in the new company proportional to their current holdings. No debt allocation or capital structure has been published.
This move reflects two structural shifts. First, hyperscale operators are internalizing more design work but still require contract manufacturers for physical assembly at scale, particularly as AI workloads push thermal and power requirements beyond standard rack configurations. Second, pure-play infrastructure suppliers command higher multiples than diversified contract manufacturers. Vertiv Holdings and Schneider Electric's IT division trade at 18-22x forward EBITDA, while Flex trades at 9x. The separation allows the cloud infrastructure unit to price acquisitions and debt at a lower cost of capital, particularly if it targets niche cooling or edge data center assets.
Allocators should track three events. Flex will file a Form 10 registration statement within 90 days, disclosing the new company's financials, customer concentration, and any supply agreements with the parent. Second, equity research will model the sum-of-parts valuation, likely assigning the spun entity a 14-16x EBITDA multiple and re-rating Flex's remaining operations lower due to automotive exposure. Third, activist funds that have avoided Flex due to conglomerate drag may accumulate shares in the new entity if management signals a willingness to sell to a strategic buyer within 18-24 months.
The infrastructure unit's largest customers are expanding U.S. data center capacity by 35% annually through 2026, and Flex has long-term supply agreements that survive the spinoff.